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1.
Lab Chip ; 21(16): 3174-3183, 2021 08 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34190746

ABSTRACT

The simultaneous separational control of motion of individual objects is vital to achieve high efficiency separation for biological analytes in biomedical applications. Here, we show the selective and directed movement of different populations of microbeads depending on their size in a flowless environment by means of a hexagonally structured soft-magnetic microchip platform. By adjusting strength and asymmetry of a modulated in-plane magnetic field, discrete and switchable movement patterns of two different types of beads above a magnetic surface structure are achieved. Starting from a heterogeneous mixture of bead populations and depending on the type of field sequences, directional forward transport of one type of beads is achieved, while the other bead population is immobilized. Despite significant size and magnetic content distributions within each population of microbeads, high separation efficiencies are demonstrated. The selection and movement processes are supported by full-scale magnetofluidic numerical simulations. The magnetic platform allowing multidirectional and selective microbead movement can greatly contribute to the progress of functional lab-on-chip and future diagnostics devices.


Subject(s)
Magnetics , Magnets , Magnetic Fields , Microspheres
2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(30): 25571-25577, 2017 Aug 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28675301

ABSTRACT

The intrinsic strain at coupled components in magnetoelectric composites plays an important role for the properties and function of these materials. In this in situ X-ray nanodiffraction experiment, the coating-induced as well as the magnetic-field-induced strain at the coupled interface of complex magnetoelectric microcomposites were investigated. These consist of piezoelectric ZnO microrods coated with an amorphous layer of magnetostrictive (Fe90Co10)78Si12B10. While the intrinsic strain is in the range of 10-4, the magnetic-field-induced strain is within 10-5, one order of magnitude smaller. Additionally, the strain relaxation distance of around 5 µm for both kinds of strain superposes indicating a correlation. The value of both intrinsic and magnetic-field-induced strain can be manipulated by the diameter of the rodlike composite. The intrinsic interface strain within the ZnO increases exponentially by decreasing the rod diameter while the magnetic-field-induced strain increases linearly within the given range. This study shows that miniaturizing has a huge impact on magnetoelectric composite properties, resulting in a strongly enhanced strain field and magnetic response.

3.
Nat Mater ; 11(6): 523-9, 2012 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22522594

ABSTRACT

Magnetoelectric composite materials are promising candidates for highly sensitive magnetic-field sensors. However, the composites showing the highest reported magnetoelectric coefficients require the presence of external d.c. magnetic bias fields, which is detrimental to their use as sensitive high-resolution magnetic-field sensors. Here, we report magnetoelectric composite materials that instead rely on intrinsic magnetic fields arising from exchange bias in the device. Thin-film magnetoelectric two-two composites were fabricated by magnetron sputtering on silicon-cantilever substrates. The composites consist of piezoelectric AlN and multilayers with the sequence Ta/Cu/Mn(70)Ir(30)/Fe(50)Co(50) or Ta/Cu/Mn(70)Ir(30)/Fe(70.2)Co(7.8)Si(12)B(10) serving as the magnetostrictive component. The thickness of the ferromagnetic layers and angle dependency of the exchange bias field are used to adjust the shift of the magnetostriction curve in such a way that the maximum piezomagnetic coefficient occurs at zero magnetic bias field. These self-biased composites show high sensitivity to a.c. magnetic fields with a maximum magnetoelectric coefficient of 96 V cm(-1) Oe(-1) at mechanical resonance.

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