4.7 Article

Metachronal actuation of microscopic magnetic artificial cilia generates strong microfluidic pumping

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 20, Issue 19, Pages 3569-3581

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0lc00610f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [833214]
  2. China Scholarship Council [201706400061]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [833214] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Biological cilia that generate fluid flow or propulsion are often found to exhibit a collective wavelike metachronal motion,i.e.neighboring cilia beat slightly out-of-phase rather than synchronously. Inspired by this observation, this article experimentally demonstrates that microscopic magnetic artificial cilia (mu MAC) performing a metachronal motion can generate strong microfluidic flows, though, interestingly, the mechanism is different from that in biological cilia, as is found through a systematic experimental study. The mu MAC are actuated by a facile magnetic setup, consisting of an array of rod-shaped magnets. This arrangement imposes a time-dependent non-uniform magnetic field on the mu MAC array, resulting in a phase difference between the beatings of adjacent mu MAC, while each cilium exhibits a two-dimensional whip-like motion. By performing the metachronal 2D motion, the mu MAC are able to generate a strong flow in a microfluidic chip, with velocities of up to 3000 mu m s(-1)in water, which, different from biological cilia, is found to be a result of combined metachronal and inertial effects, in addition to the effect of asymmetric beating. The pumping performance of the metachronal mu MAC outperforms all previously reported microscopic artificial cilia, and is competitive with that of most of the existing microfluidic pumping methods, while the proposed platform requires no physical connection to peripheral equipment, reduces the usage of reagents by minimizing dead volumes, avoids undesirable electrical effects, and accommodates a wide range of different fluids. The 2D metachronal motion can also generate a flow with velocities up to 60 mu m s(-1)in pure glycerol, where Reynolds number is less than 0.05 and the flow is primarily caused by the metachronal motion of the mu MAC. These findings offer a novel solution to not only create on-chip integrated micropumps, but also design swimming and walking microrobots, as well as self-cleaning and antifouling surfaces.

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