Self-arraying of charged levitating droplets.

Anal Chem

Grenoble Electrical Engineering Laboratory (G2Elab), UMR 5269 (Grenoble-INP, UJF, CNRS), BP 46, 38402 Saint Martin d'Hères Cedex, France.

Published: June 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Diamagnetic levitation allows for the contactless manipulation of water droplets, which is beneficial for handling chemical and biochemical samples without contamination.
  • Under a nonuniform magnetic field, water droplets can be levitated as they experience a repulsive force that balances with other forces, leading to interesting formations and patterns.
  • The interactions and forces between the levitating droplets, which can be measured with high precision, change over time as the droplets evaporate.

Article Abstract

Diamagnetic levitation of water droplets in air is a promising phenomenon to achieve contactless manipulation of chemical or biochemical samples. This noncontact handling technique prevents contaminations of samples as well as provides measurements of interaction forces between levitating reactors. Under a nonuniform magnetic field, diamagnetic bodies such as water droplets experience a repulsive force which may lead to diamagnetic levitation of a single or few micro-objects. The levitation of several repulsively charged picoliter droplets was successfully performed in a ~1 mm(2) adjustable flat magnetic well provided by a centimeter-sized cylindrical permanent magnet structure. Each droplet position results from the balance between the centripetal diamagnetic force and the repulsive Coulombian forces. Levitating water droplets self-organize into satellite patterns or thin clouds, according to their charge and size. Small triangular lattices of identical droplets reproduce magneto-Wigner crystals. Repulsive forces and inner charges can be measured in the piconewton and the femtocoulomb ranges, respectively. Evolution of interaction forces is accurately followed up over time during droplet evaporation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac2002774DOI Listing

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