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Mattertronics for programmable manipulation and multiplex storage of pseudo-diamagnetic holes and label-free cells

Authors :
Byeonghwa Lim
Sri Ramulu Torati
Hyeonseol Kim
Metin Sitti
Devin Sheehan
Sandhya Rani Goudu
Kunwoo Kim
CheolGi Kim
Xinghao Hu
Hakan Ceylan
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2021)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Manipulating and separating single label-free cells without biomarker conjugation have attracted significant interest in the field of single-cell research, but digital circuitry control and multiplexed individual storage of single label-free cells remain a challenge. Herein, by analogy with the electrical circuitry elements and electronical holes, we develop a pseudo-diamagnetophoresis (PsD) mattertronic approach in the presence of biocompatible ferrofluids for programmable manipulation and local storage of single PsD holes and label-free cells. The PsD holes conduct along linear negative micro-magnetic patterns. Further, eclipse diode patterns similar to the electrical diode can implement directional and selective switching of different PsD holes and label-free cells based on the diode geometry. Different eclipse heights and junction gaps influence the switching efficiency of PsD holes for mattertronic circuitry manipulation and separation. Moreover, single PsD holes are stored at each potential well as in an electrical storage capacitor, preventing multiple occupancies of PsD holes in the array of individual compartments due to magnetic Coulomb-like interaction. This approach may enable the development of large programmable arrays of label-free matters with high throughput, efficiency, and reliability as multiplex cell research platforms.<br />Here, the authors present a pseudo-diamagnetophoresis mattertronic approach for programmable manipulation of label-free cells. Immersed in biocompatible ferrofluids, single cells are moved along linear negative micromagnetic patterns, switched at eclipse diode patterns and stored in potential wells.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a051bd136fe6d259dc68bcad5497266f