Aaveg Aggarwal, Shih-Yuan Chen, Eleftherios Kirkinis, Mohammed Imran Khan, Bei Fan, Michelle M. Driscoll, Monica Olvera de la Cruz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Active components incorporated in materials generate motion by inducing conformational changes in response to external fields. Magnetic fields, in particular, carry the added advantage of biocompatibility as well as being able to actuate materials remotely. Although ferrofluid droplet migration induced by a high-frequency rotating magnetic field is a well-established effect, droplet migration at low frequencies is still elusive. Millimeter-sized ferrofluid droplets placed on a solid substrate, surrounded by an ambient gas phase, are shown here to migrate under a rotating magnetic field due to inertia-induced symmetry-breaking of the periodic deformation (wobbling) of the liquid-gas interface. This interface wobbling leads to droplet migration with speeds that increase as the amplitude and frequency of the magnetic field increase. In addition to migrating in a controlled manner, we demonstrate the ability of magnetic droplets to clean surface impurities and transport cargo. Active components incorporated in materials generate motion by inducing conformational changes in response to external fields. In this study, the authors show that a rotating magnetic field leads a ferrofluid droplet to wobble, migrate, clean surface impurities and transport cargo.
期刊介绍:
Communications Physics is an open access journal from Nature Research publishing high-quality research, reviews and commentary in all areas of the physical sciences. Research papers published by the journal represent significant advances bringing new insight to a specialized area of research in physics. We also aim to provide a community forum for issues of importance to all physicists, regardless of sub-discipline.
The scope of the journal covers all areas of experimental, applied, fundamental, and interdisciplinary physical sciences. Primary research published in Communications Physics includes novel experimental results, new techniques or computational methods that may influence the work of others in the sub-discipline. We also consider submissions from adjacent research fields where the central advance of the study is of interest to physicists, for example material sciences, physical chemistry and technologies.