A New Drop Fluidics Enabled by Magnetic Field Mediated Elasto-Capillary Transduction
Saheli Biswas, Yves Pomeau, Manoj K. Chaudhury

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel drop fluidics technique using a magnetic field-controlled elastomeric film to manipulate water droplets precisely, enabling applications like biochemical reactions and PCR.
Contribution
It introduces a new magnetic field mediated elasto-capillary transduction method on soft, deformable films for droplet control, combining theory and experimental validation.
Findings
Theoretical model accurately predicts droplet speed based on geometric and material variables.
Magnetic control enables precise manipulation of single and multiple droplets.
Potential applications in biochemical reactions like PCR.
Abstract
This research introduces a new drop fluidics, which uses a deformable and stretchable elastomeric film as the platform, instead of the commonly used rigid supports. Such a soft film impregnated with magnetic particles can be modulated with an external electromagnetic field that produces a vast array of topographical landscapes with varying surface curvature, which, in conjunction with capillarity, can direct and control motion of water droplets efficiently and accurately. When a thin layer of oil is present on this film that is deformed locally, a centrosymmetric wedge is formed. A water droplet placed on this oil laden film becomes asymmetrically deformed thus producing a gradient of Laplace pressure within the droplet setting it to motion. A simple theory is presented that accounts for the droplet speed in terms of such geometric variables as the volume of the droplet and the…
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