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research article

Magnetic forces produced by rectangular permanent magnets in static microsystems

Gassner, A-L  
•
Abonnenc, M  
•
Chen, H-X
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2009
Lab on a Chip

Finite element numerical simulations were carried out in 2D geometries to map the magnetic field and force distribution produced by rectangular permanent magnets as a function of their size and position with respect to a microchannel. A single magnet, two magnets placed in attraction and in repulsion have been considered. The goal of this work is to show where magnetic beads are preferentially captured in a microchannel. These simulations were qualitatively corroborated, in one geometrical case, by microscopic visualizations of magnetic bead plug formation in a capillary. The results show that the number of plugs is configuration dependent with: in attraction, one plug in the middle of the magnets; in repulsion, two plugs near the edges of the magnets; and with a single magnet, a plug close to the center of the magnet. The geometry of the magnets (h and l are the height and length of the magnets respectively) and their relative spacing s has a significant impact on the magnetic flux density. Its value inside a magnet increases with the h/l ratio. Consequently, bar magnets produce larger and more uniform values than flat magnets. The l/s ratio also influences the magnetic force value in the microchannel, both increasing concomitantly for all the configurations. In addition, a zero force zone in the middle appears in the attraction configuration as the l/s ratio increases, while with a single magnet, the number of maxima and minima goes from one to two, producing two focusing zones instead of only one.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1039/b901865d
Web of Science ID

WOS:000268370400012

Author(s)
Gassner, A-L  
Abonnenc, M  
Chen, H-X
Morandini, J
Josserand, J  
Rossier, J S  
Busnel, J-M  
Girault, H.H.  
Date Issued

2009

Published in
Lab on a Chip
Volume

9

Issue

16

Start page

2356

End page

2363

Subjects

On-Column Capture

•

Microfluidic Channel

•

Separation

•

Beads

•

Particles

•

Systems

•

Protein

•

Chip

•

Flow

•

Electromagnets

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEPA  
Available on Infoscience
January 6, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/45102
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