Orienting lipid-coated graphitic micro-particles in solution using AC electric fields: A new theoretical dual-ellipsoid Laplace model for electro-orientation
Johnny Nguyen, Jonathan G. Underwood, Isabel Llorente Garc\'ia

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new dual-ellipsoid Laplace model for accurately predicting the electro-orientation torque of lipid-coated graphitic micro-particles in AC electric fields, improving upon traditional models.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel dual-ellipsoid Laplace model that accounts for non-uniform layer thickness, enabling precise torque predictions for coated micro-particles in solution.
Findings
Model accurately predicts torque versus frequency for lipid-coated graphite particles.
Lipid shell thickness and solution conductivity critically influence torque response.
Experimental results validate the model's predictions at MHz frequencies.
Abstract
Graphitic micro-particles coated with thin layers in solution are technologically interesting as they can be manipulated with electric fields. Modeling the electrical manipulation of submerged layered micro-particles analytically or numerically is not straight forward. In particular, the generation of reliable quantitative torque predictions for electro-orientation experiments has been elusive. The traditional Laplace model approximates the coated particle by an ellipsoid with a confocal ellipsoidal layer and solves Laplace's equation to produce convenient analytical predictions. However, due to the non-uniformity of the layer thickness around the ellipsoid, this method can lead to incorrect torque predictions. Here we present a new theoretical dual-ellipsoid Laplace model that corrects the effect of the non-uniform layer thickness by calculating two layered ellipsoids, each accounting…
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