Fengshan Shen,
Yan Yu,
Yuexuan Li,
Hongtao Feng,
Tianzhun Wu and
Yan Chen*
CAS Key Laboratory of Health Informatics, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, China. E-mail: yan.chen@siat.ac.cn
First published on 27th October 2021
The ability to locally modulate the magnetic field distribution is a prerequisite for efficient manipulation in magnetic force-based microfluidic devices. Here, we report a simple, robust, and fast fabrication method of magnetic microstructures for locally modulating magnetic fields. In the proposed method, a photosensitive magnetic composite consisting of carbonyl-iron microparticles in a poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) matrix was utilized to photolithographically fabricate magnetic microstructures. The magnetic behavior of the composite was first evaluated, and then various complicated patterns were fabricated on a glass slide within a few minutes. To demonstrate the capability of magnetic microstructures as a magnetic field concentrator, magnetic microstructures with different orientations to the external magnetic field were designed and fabricated, such as square arrays and grid-like magnetic microstructures. The modulated magnetic fields from such magnetic microstructures were numerically analyzed and then experimentally validated by trapping magnetic hydrogel beads. Further, the magnetically labeled cells were applied to the magnetic microstructures to prove the possibility of cell confinement via magnetic guidance in regions that exhibit enhanced magnetic field gradients. Overall, the proposed approach facilitates simple and fast fabrication of soft magnetic microstructures for microscale modulation of magnetic fields, which exhibits an immense application potential in magnetic force-based microfluidic techniques.
Magnetic objects include not only intrinsically magnetic samples such as magnetotactic bacteria,3 but also samples that are labelled with magnetic particles.4 The use of magnetic particles specifically conjugated to targets offer great selectivity allowing various applications for separation or detection, including immunomagnetic separation of cells,5 proteins,6 and nucleic acids,7 the detection of pathogens.7 Besides, with the aid of controllable magnetic forces by designing magnetic fields, cells can guide toward designed spatial arrangements,8,9 which make it suitable for the organization of cells such as to align and migrate cells into a targeted pattern10 and to pattern cells at specific points.11 The generation of flexible and controllable magnetic fields plays a crucial role in making a better use of magnetic guidance.12 Generally, the applied magnetic field is generated by permanent magnets positioned external to the microchannel. However, it is challenging to obtain precise control of the magnetic field distribution at the micrometer scale as the dimension of permanent magnets is in the millimeter scale. In addition, a lower magnetic field exerts a weaker magnetic force, and the ability to generate strong magnetic field gradients in the desired area is a prerequisite for efficient and precise magnetic manipulation. It is well established that the strong magnetic field gradients are mainly created at the edges of magnets. Therefore, the high magnetic field area inside the microchannel is mainly limited to the vicinity of the magnet edges. Consequently, the regions farther away from magnet edges appear to be exposed to a low magnetic field. Hence, it is difficult to arbitrarily control the magnetic field distribution in a designated position within the microchannel. To overcome this difficulty, soft magnetic materials in which the flux lines of external fields are concentrated have been introduced into the magnetic force-based microfluidic systems operated by external permanent magnets.13,14 Typically, due to their significantly higher magnetic permeability than the surrounding solution, Ni and Ni–Fe alloys are exploited to locally increase the magnetic field gradients.15,16 Metal microstructures, such as pillars, strips, and combs with size on the micrometer scale have been fabricated inside or close to the microchannel. Under the applied magnetic fields, these microstructures induce a strong local magnetic field gradient, which is used in several applications, such as the capture and sorting of bacteria or cells and the generation of cell arrays. Although these magnetic microstructures allow the control of magnetic field distribution on the micrometer scale, they are obtained by complex microfabrication techniques like electroplating or sputtering. To generate substantial thickness at the micrometer scale, the processes easily become costly, time-consuming, labour intensive, and generate huge waste.
Alternatively, methods for injecting diluted magnetic particle suspensions, such as nickel microparticle suspensions17 or diluted ferrofluid into microchannels have been reported.18 However, due to the lower content of magnetic material in such magnetic microstructures, the enhancement effect of the magnetic field gradient is limited. On the other hand, several groups reported the fabrication of magnetic microstructures by molding magnetic composites that were made of PDMS and magnetic particles.19 Zhou et al. prepared magnetic microstructures by filling and curing a magnetic composite composed of a PDMS matrix doped with carbonyl-iron particles in the microfluidic channel, and they demonstrated the enhanced separation effects of magnetic particles.17 Yu et al. generated the magnetic structures by filling micro-holes on the mold using nickel powder and then cast it using PDMS to solidify the magnetic pillars that effectively controlled the localized magnetic field distribution.22 Although these microstructures showed substantial enhancement of the local magnetic field gradients, the high-density difference between PDMS and magnetic particles easily caused agglomeration and sedimentation of magnetic metal powders during the PDMS curing period.20,21 In addition, considering the micrometer-scale mold cavity, where surface tension and viscous drag can dominate, it is not easy to homogeneously fill these microstructures with composites to generate robust magnetic microstructures. The above-mentioned approaches may offer a low-cost alternative to conventional microfabrication approaches; they also require the PDMS-casting cavity fabrication process.
In this study, we propose a rapid photolithographic method to fabricate magnetic microstructures for modulating magnetic fields on a micrometer scale. In this technique, the photosensitive magnetic composite, which is composed of photosensitive poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) and carbonyl-iron (CI) microparticle, was deposited by spin coating and rapidly solidified by UV exposure through a photomask. Compared with the micro-molding method using an injection of thermal curable magnetic composites (magnetic particles@PDMS matrix), the use of UV sensitive magnetic composite and the deposition step in the way of spin-coating can dramatically simplify the fabrication process, brining various advantages such as greater accessibility, flexibility, and easy fabrication and ease of integration. Prior to fabrication, the magnetic behaviour of the composite consisting of carbonyl-iron microparticles in the PEGDA matrix was characterized, and the various factors that influence the fabrication pattern fidelity were examined to determine the optimal condition for robust fabrication. To investigate whether it is possible to modulate the magnetic field distribution by varying the shape and orientation of magnetic microstructures, square arrays aligned along the magnetic field direction and grid-like magnetic microstructures arranged obliquely to the magnetic field were designed and fabricated. The modulated magnetic field distribution was numerically analysed and then experimentally validated by trapping magnetic hydrogel beads through magnetic field guidance. Further, the magnetically labelled cells were applied to the magnetic microstructures to prove the possibility of cell confinement in regions exhibiting enhanced magnetic field gradients. This simple and cost-effective approach without requiring the fabrication of casting molding facilitates simple and fast fabrication of soft magnetic microstructures for microscale modulation of magnetic fields, which indicates its immense application potential in magnetic force-based microfluidic techniques.
The magnetic composite layer was then exposed to 365 nm UV light from a mask aligner (EVG 610, EV group, Austria) through two layers, namely the photomask and the TPM-treated glass slide. Only the regions of CI-PEGDA exposed to UV light underwent free-radical polymerization and were solidified, while during development, unexposed regions of CI-PEGDA were removed from the surface using DI water and soon dried with nitrogen gas. To examine the influence of the thickness of the TPM-treated glass slide and exposure time on the extent of pattern formation, various thicknesses of the glass slide and exposure time were considered. The morphology of magnetic structures was visualized using a scanning electron microscope (SEM, Zeiss Sigma 300) with an acceleration voltage of 10 kV. The thickness of magnetic structures was measured using a profilometer (DEKTAK 6M, Veeco Instrument, NY, USA).
The magnetic flux density (B) of permanent magnets and soft magnetic microstructures can be expressed as follows:
For permanent magnets
B = μ0μrH + Br |
B = μ0μrH |
Even though the backside exposure mode facilitates reproducible operation, the TPM-treated glass slide is sandwiched between the photomask and photosensitive layer, which inevitably induces a glass gap whose length is identical to the glass slide's thickness. Such spacing between the mask and the magnetic photoresist is over orders of magnitude higher than a gap in the lithography proximity mode and thus has a much stronger impact on the pattern's fidelity. Any beams that are not vertically collimated to the photoresist substrate after crossing the photomask can substantially enlarge the exposure zone when they pass through the glass gap. Since the enlargement of the exposure zone may lead to the degradation of pattern fidelity, such as an increase in the width of patterned lines, the effect of the gap needs to be examined. To evaluate the divergence between the target width and the actual fabricated width, pattern lines with widths ranging from 50 to 200 μm were fabricated for testing with varying glass slide thicknesses such as 1000, 500, and 210 μm. The dotted line in Fig. 2b indicates the region where the actual fabricated width is the same as the target width. As expected, a larger gap leads to a greater difference between the target and actual width, while narrowing down the gap with thinner glass slides causes the width of patterns to be close to the target width. Especially in the glass slide whose thickness is 210 μm, the width of patterned lines is approximately equal to the target width, which facilitates sufficient pattern fidelity for the fabrication of magnetic microstructures.
Next, the achievable thickness was evaluated by varying the UV dose. As mentioned earlier, the magnetic composite can greatly reduce the transmittance of UV. The decrease in UV transparency can significantly influence the extent of the curable thickness of the magnetic microstructures. We adjusted the exposure time from 30 to 120 s to increase the UV exposure dose. Fig. 2c shows a notable increase in the cured thickness with the increase in the exposure time from 30 to 60 s, and after that, although the exposure time is increased to 120 s, a slight increase in the achievable height is observed. In addition, a closer inspection of the details of cured magnetic structures by SEM reveals a rough surface because of the embedded particles, and a large number of carbonyl-iron microparticles are affixed in the PEG matrix without much aggregation. The rough surface can be the reason for the large standard deviation of thickness. Although there is a limitation in improving the degree of curing by increasing the UV exposure dose, the achievable thickness obtained here is sufficient to localize the magnetic fields. Thus, in the fabrication process, we selected the exposure time as 120 s and prepared magnetic microstructures with height ranging from 16 to 24 μm for further applications.
Finally, we tested various geometric test patterns with features that included curvature structures, saw-tooth borders, and densely packed honeycomb-like configurations (Fig. 2d). Using these patterns, the corresponding magnetic microstructures were fabricated. It can be seen that even the complicated features of these patterns were successfully transferred to the magnetic composites without defects. The clearly defined magnetic microstructure in the magnified images indicates that the non-crosslinked polymer is completely removed from the surface. Overall, these fabrication results indicate that the magnetic structures can be rapidly fabricated within a few minutes through the proposed simple and robust photolithographic method, no matter how complicated the designed patterns are.
For square patterns, the spatial arrangement is as follows: the patterns with sizes of 500 × 500 μm2 and 200 × 200 μm2 are vertically arrayed along the direction of the external magnetic field, and the vertical spacing between patterns was designed to be 250 μm and 200 μm, which corresponded to a half and the total size of the pattern, respectively. The horizontal spacing between the adjacent lanes of the respective array was set to 1000 μm and 600 μm, which is as large as three-fold and two-fold of each pattern size. When magnetized by the external magnetic field, the magnetic microstructures generate a strong localized field to provide an enhanced magnetic field density gradient (∇B2), which is proportional to the magnetic force acting on the magnetic particles. Fig. 3a and b show the distribution of magnetic field density gradient in these spatial arrangements of patterned arrays. Obviously, ∇B2 is dramatically increased in just the areas with patterns in the vertical direction (but not in the horizontal direction) that are perpendicular to the magnetic field. Additionally, in the regions without patterns, there is no apparent increase and ∇B2 becomes negligible. Meanwhile, the characteristic profile of ∇B2 generated by the two adjacent pattern units along the y-axis is displayed together with that without the magnetic microstructures for a comparison (see Fig. 3c). The value of ∇B2 is negligible in the absence of magnetic microstructures. However, applying square magnetic microstructures causes a significant change in the magnetic field distribution at the pattern boundary regions, leading to a sharp increase in the gradient in these regions. Nevertheless, this effect rapidly diminishes with distance. Consequently, the value of ∇B2 is maximum at the edge and shows four peaks at the edge. The magnitude of enhancement is as high as 400 T2 m−1 as compared to 1.2 T2 m−1 in the absence of magnetic microstructures, which are able to provide up to 400 times stronger magnetic force. However, it decays rapidly and then becomes insignificant at a distance of 125 μm from the edge, making it difficult to realize a reinforcement effect by magnetic microstructures beyond that distance. Conversely, when the width between the edges is closer than their influential limit distance, the local gradients created by edges can overlap, enlarging the value of ∇B2 along the width between edges. This explains why the profile with the pattern size of 200 μm with a 200 μm spacing width can always exhibit a higher value of ∇B2 than that without patterns. In contrast, for the pattern size of 1000 μm with an adjacent width of 250 μm, the value remains slightly higher in the adjoining width range. However, near the center of the pattern, it can drop to a low level, almost equal to the level without magnetic microstructures.
To experimentally validate the simulation results, the magnetic hydrogel beads were trapped under modulated magnetic field. The magnetic hydrogel beads in suspension are introduced into the microchannel integrated with magnetic microstructures. After filling, the flow is arrested for excluding other influences, such as hydrodynamic force, other than the magnetic force. There are generally two types of magnetic forces experienced by magnetic beads in external magnetic fields, originating from their permanent or induced dipole moments: the interaction forces between magnetic particles and magnetic fields and the interparticle interaction between magnetic particles.28 When an external magnetic field is applied, magnetic hydrogel beads, which were initially randomly distributed in the channel, are attracted to a nearby high magnetic field area due to the magnetic force induced by the external magnetic fields. Consequently, magnetic beads are locally trapped in the magnetic microstructure regions, in which the magnetic field gradient is enhanced, thereby generating patterns of magnetic hydrogel beads according to the magnetic microstructures. Fig. 4a and b show magnetic bead patterns generated by the square pattern arrays. It was observed that the magnetic hydrogel beads are trapped only in the adjacent areas between two patterns along the y-axis direction, where the periodic edge regions appear, which have an increased field gradient and accordingly exert a strong magnetic force. Simultaneously, there are no magnetic beads in the region devoid of magnetic microstructures as well as in the adjoining areas along the x-axis direction. The magnetic force in these regions is negligible due to the almost zero field gradient from a relatively uniform magnetic field. In addition, the captured magnetic beads are not clustered. Instead, due to the magnetic dipole interactions between them, they form chain-like agglomerates oriented in the field direction. We further attempted the magnetic guidance of cells labelled with magnetic nanoparticles under modulated magnetic field. As shown in Fig. 4c and d, the magnetically labelled cells are locally confined to the high magnetic field zones of square patterns. For the small square pattern array, the cells are distributed both around the edges or in the area between the patterns. On the other hand, in the large square pattern array, the cells are only closely arranged near the edges. These results are in excellent agreement with the simulation results, which indicates that the smaller pattern shows a higher field gradient value between the edges due to the close overlap. However, unlike the trapped magnetic beads assembled to chain-like agglomerates, the captured cells do not show any effective response of magnetic dipole interaction between them due to their negligible induced magnetic moments, indicating that the amount of magnetic loading in the cells is much lower than that in the magnetic beads. Moreover, the cells are exposed to a much smaller magnetic force than the magnetic beads, even under the same strength of magnetic field gradients.
Next, a grid-like pattern with diamond-shaped holes of size 650 μm and grid bar width of 320 μm was fabricated. The grid-like pattern was obliquely arranged with respect to the magnetic field direction, creating angles of 25° and 45° between the magnetic field and the right and left lines of the grid, respectively. The simulation result of ∇B2 in the plane situated 2 μm above the surface of the grid-like pattern is shown in Fig. 4a. The areas without the grid-like pattern exhibit negligibly low values of ∇B2. In the patterned area, the inner area of the grid shows no increase in intensity, but on the border, the value is dramatically increased. As expected, it is maximal at the edges and sharply decays away from the edges. Interestingly, the border regions of the grid bars with a larger angle to the external magnetic field show higher values of ∇B2 than the border zones of grid bars with a smaller angle. These discrepancies between the bars with different angles are likely due to the difference in the distribution of the magnetic field in these bars. When the grid-like pattern acts as a magnetic concentrator, the external magnetic field is preferentially incident on to the bars with a smaller angle of incidence, and the magnetic field lines are completely confined in the areas, leading to a uniform magnetic field density distribution in such bar areas. By contrast, the bars with a larger angle of incidence show spatially non-uniform field distribution due to the less concentrated field lines in the bar regions (see Fig. S1†). For the trapping of magnetic hydrogel beads, as shown in Fig. 2b, it is observed that the magnetic hydrogel beads are confined only to the hole areas in two different distributions depending on their location. Briefly, near the boundary regions, most of the beads attached to the borderlines have the maximum magnitude of the magnetic field gradient. Further, there are no beads above the magnetic microstructures bar areas. This is because the beads initially distributed in the bar areas migrate toward the borderlines and later tend to be adhered there due to the strong magnetic force. The beads that are relatively far from the boundary are not affected by the magnetic force produced by the boundary regions. In fact, these beads are themselves magnetized by the external magnetic field and form a chain arranged in the direction of the magnetic field through the magnetic dipole interaction between them. When this chain is long enough to extend to the boundary, it can be seen that the entire chain migrates to the borderlines and adheres to there. These observations are consistent with the simulation results, which validate the modulation of the local magnetic field by the magnetic microstructure. On the other hand, the cells located in the hole areas are not affected by the external magnetic field. Only the cells initially situated within the bar area receive a sufficiently strong magnetic force and appear to move toward the nearby borderlines. Consequently, the confinement of cells is observed only as islands in the hole areas (see Fig. 5c). Therefore, it can be concluded that it is possible to distribute the cells in the desired areas through magnetic guidance under a controllable magnetic field distribution created by the designed magnetic microstructures.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d1ra06173a |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021 |