Publications by authors named "Hyeon Choe"

Article Synopsis
  • - Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) are tiny particles (1 to 100 nanometers) made from magnetic materials, possessing unique properties that differ from larger forms; they are increasingly used in various fields such as medicine and technology.
  • - Their small size and magnetic behavior allow for manipulation with external magnetic fields, making them useful for targeted medical applications like drug delivery and imaging, while also being explored for environmental and energy-related uses.
  • - Despite the growing applications of MNPs, there are important concerns about their safety, such as potential toxicity and how they interact with cells, which is becoming a focus of both research and clinical studies.
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Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) have recently gained significant attention in various fields, including chemical and biomedical applications, due to their exceptional properties. However, separating MNPs from solution magnetophoresis is challenging when MNPs are smaller than 50 nm as Brownian forces become on the order of the magnetic forces. In this study, we successfully separated small MNPs (5-30 nm) by utilizing high magnetic fields and gradients generated by economical permanent magnets.

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Precisely and accurately determining the magnetic force and its spatial distribution in microfluidic devices is challenging. Typically, magnetic microfluidic devices are designed in a way to both maximize the force within the separation region and to minimize the necessity for knowing such details-such as designing magnetic geometries that create regions of nearly constant magnetic force or that dictate the behavior of the magnetic force to be highly predictable in a specified region. In this work, we present a method to determine the spatial distribution of the magnetic force field in a magnetic microfluidic device by particle tracking magnetophoresis.

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Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) have gathered tremendous scientific interest, especially in the biomedical field, for multiple applications, including bioseparation, drug delivery, etc. Nevertheless, their manipulation and separation with magnetic fields are challenging due to their small size. We recently reported the coupling of cooperative magnetophoresis and sedimentation using quadrupole magnets as a promising strategy to successfully promote SPION recovery from media.

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Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited blood disorder that affects millions of people worldwide, especially in low-resource regions of the world, where a rapid and affordable test to properly diagnose the disease would be highly valued. Magnetophoresis is a technique that could simultaneously analyze, quantify, and potentially separate the patient's sickle red blood cells (RBCs) from healthy RBCs, but the magnetic characteristics of sickle RBCs have yet to be reported. In this work, we present the single cell magnetic characterization of RBCs obtained from SCD patients.

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