Aggregation of magnetic holes in a rotating magnetic field
Jozef \v{C}ern\'ak, Geir Helgesen

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how nonmagnetic particles in a magnetic fluid aggregate into clusters under rotating magnetic fields, revealing non-universal scaling behavior and Brownian-like motion of clusters.
Contribution
It demonstrates field-induced aggregation dynamics of magnetic holes, analyzes scaling exponents, and shows non-universality and Brownian motion features in cluster behavior.
Findings
Clusters follow dynamic scaling theory.
Scaling exponents are non-universal.
Cluster diffusion coefficients follow a power law.
Abstract
We have experimentally investigated field induced aggregation of nonmagnetic particles confined in a magnetic fluid layer when rotating magnetic fields were applied. After application of a magnetic field rotating in the plane of the fluid layer, the single particles start to form two-dimensional (2D) clusters, like doublets, triangels, and more complex structures. These clusters aggregated again and again to form bigger clusters. During this nonequilibrium process, a broad range of cluster sizes was formed, and the scaling exponents, and , of the number of clusters and average cluster size were calculated. The process could be characterized as diffusion limited cluster-cluster aggregation. We have found that all sizes of clusters that occured during an experiment, fall on a single curve as the dynamic scaling theory predicts. Hovewer, the…
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