Magnetically actuated artificial microswimmers as mobile microparticle manipulators
Jake Buzhardt, Phanindra Tallapragada

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that magnetically actuated microswimmers can be used to contactlessly manipulate microparticles in fluid environments, with controllable motion achieved through magnetic field parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical model of a magnetically driven microswimmer capable of manipulating nearby microparticles via fluid disturbance fields.
Findings
Microswimmers can be controlled by switching magnetic field direction and frequency.
Cargo particles are propelled by the swimmer's induced flow, enabling contactless manipulation.
The model applies to various swimmer geometries and propulsion methods.
Abstract
Micro-scale swimming robots have been envisaged for many medical applications such as targeted drug delivery, where the microrobot will be expected to navigate in a fluid through channels carrying a payload. Alternatively, in many cases, such a payload does not have to be physically bound to the swimmer, but may be instead manipulated and steered through the channel by the microrobot. We investigate this problem of contactless manipulation of a microparticle by mobile microswimmer in a fluid at low Reynolds number. We consider a model of a magnetically actuated artificial microswimmer, whose locomotion through a fluid induces a disturbance velocity field in the fluid, that then acts to propel a cargo particle in its vicinity. The problem investigated in this paper is therefore one of coupled locomotion-manipulation of two bodies in a fluid. The magnetic swimmer's motion is actuated by…
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