TY - JOUR
T1 - Nano/micro-scale magnetophoretic devices for biomedical applications
AU - Lim, Byeonghwa
AU - Vavassori, Paolo
AU - Sooryakumar, R.
AU - Kim, Cheolgi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2017/1/25
Y1 - 2017/1/25
N2 - In recent years there have been tremendous advances in the versatility of magnetic shuttle technology using nano/micro-scale magnets for digital magnetophoresis. While the technology has been used for a wide variety of single-cell manipulation tasks such as selection, capture, transport, encapsulation, transfection, or lysing of magnetically labeled and unlabeled cells, it has also expanded to include parallel actuation and study of multiple bio-entities. The use of nano/micro-patterned magnetic structures that enable remote control of the applied forces has greatly facilitated integration of the technology with microfluidics, thereby fostering applications in the biomedical arena. The basic design and fabrication of various scaled magnets for remote manipulation of individual and multiple beads/cells, and their associated energies and forces that underlie the broad functionalities of this approach, are presented. One of the most useful features enabled by such advanced integrated engineering is the capacity to remotely tune the magnetic field gradient and energy landscape, permitting such multipurpose shuttles to be implemented within lab-on-chip platforms for a wide range of applications at the intersection of cellular biology and biotechnology.
AB - In recent years there have been tremendous advances in the versatility of magnetic shuttle technology using nano/micro-scale magnets for digital magnetophoresis. While the technology has been used for a wide variety of single-cell manipulation tasks such as selection, capture, transport, encapsulation, transfection, or lysing of magnetically labeled and unlabeled cells, it has also expanded to include parallel actuation and study of multiple bio-entities. The use of nano/micro-patterned magnetic structures that enable remote control of the applied forces has greatly facilitated integration of the technology with microfluidics, thereby fostering applications in the biomedical arena. The basic design and fabrication of various scaled magnets for remote manipulation of individual and multiple beads/cells, and their associated energies and forces that underlie the broad functionalities of this approach, are presented. One of the most useful features enabled by such advanced integrated engineering is the capacity to remotely tune the magnetic field gradient and energy landscape, permitting such multipurpose shuttles to be implemented within lab-on-chip platforms for a wide range of applications at the intersection of cellular biology and biotechnology.
KW - cell sorting
KW - magnetic domain walls
KW - magnetophoresis
KW - micro/nanopatterns
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85012022702&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1361-6463/50/3/033002
DO - 10.1088/1361-6463/50/3/033002
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85012022702
SN - 0022-3727
VL - 50
JO - Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
JF - Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
IS - 3
M1 - 033002
ER -