4.5 Article

Self-Cleaning Surfaces Realized by Biologically Sized Magnetic Artificial Cilia

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admi.202102016

Keywords

biologically sized magnetic artificial cilia; particle removal; self-cleaning surfaces; small-scaled magnetic artificial cilia

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant Bio-Plan project [833214]
  2. China Scholarship Council [201706400061]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [833214] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study successfully removed microparticles using biologically-sized magnetic artificial cilia that are only 45 micrometers long, achieving a cleanliness level of up to 100% with the highest actuation frequency. The randomness in cilia distribution is shown to have a positive effect on cleanliness compared to a regular cilia array.
Magnetic artificial cilia (MAC) are small actuators inspired by biological cilia found in nature. In microfluidic chips, MAC can generate flow and remove microparticles, with applications in anti-fouling. However, the MAC used for anti-fouling in the current literature has dimensions of several hundred micrometers in length, which limits the application to relatively large length scales. Here, biologically-sized magnetic artificial cilia (b-MAC) which are only 45 micrometers long and that are randomly distributed on the surface, are used to remove microparticles. It is shown that microparticles with sizes ranging from 5 to 40 mu m can be removed efficiently and the final cleanness ranges from 69% to 100%, with the highest cleanness for the highest actuation frequency applied (40 Hz). The lowest cleanness is obtained for microparticles with a size equal to the average pitch between the b-MAC. The randomness in cilia distribution appears to have a positive effect on cleanliness, compared with the authors' earlier work using a regular cilia array. The demonstrated self-cleaning by the b-MAC constitutes an essential step toward efficient self-cleaning surfaces for real-life application in miniaturized microfluidic devices, such as lab-on-a-chip or organ-on-a-chip devices, as well as for preventing fouling of submerged surfaces such as marine sensors.

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