Issue 13, 2015

Transportation, dispersion and ordering of dense colloidal assemblies by magnetic interfacial rotaphoresis

Abstract

Colloidal systems exhibit intriguing assembly phenomena with impact in a wide variety of technological fields. The use of magnetically responsive colloids allows one to exploit interactions with an anisotropic dipolar nature. Here, we reveal magnetic interfacial rotaphoresis – a magnetically-induced rotational excitation that imposes a translational motion on colloids by a strong interaction with a solid–liquid interface – as a means to transport, disperse, and order dense colloidal assemblies. By balancing magnetic dipolar and hydrodynamic interactions at a symmetry-breaking interface, rotaphoresis effectuates a translational dispersive motion of the colloids and surprisingly transforms large and dense multilayer assemblies into single-particle layers with quasi-hexagonal ordering within seconds and with velocities of mm s−1. We demonstrate the application of interfacial rotaphoresis to enhance molecular target capture, showing an increase of the molecular capture rate by more than an order of magnitude.

Graphical abstract: Transportation, dispersion and ordering of dense colloidal assemblies by magnetic interfacial rotaphoresis

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Mar 2015
Accepted
11 May 2015
First published
11 May 2015

Lab Chip, 2015,15, 2864-2871

Author version available

Transportation, dispersion and ordering of dense colloidal assemblies by magnetic interfacial rotaphoresis

A. van Reenen, A. M. de Jong and M. W. J. Prins, Lab Chip, 2015, 15, 2864 DOI: 10.1039/C5LC00294J

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