Electroferrofluids with non-equilibrium voltage-controlled magnetism, interfaces, and patterns
Tomy Cherian, Fereshteh Sohrabi, Carlo Rigoni, Olli Ikkala, Jaakko V., I. Timonen

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how electroferrofluids, created by charging nanoparticles and applying electric fields, exhibit voltage-controlled magnetic properties and pattern formation driven by non-equilibrium steady states, expanding functional material design.
Contribution
It introduces a method to create and quantify non-equilibrium states in colloidal nanoparticles through continuous energy dissipation, enabling new functionalities and pattern formations.
Findings
Voltage-controlled magnetic responses in electroferrofluids
Emergence of dissipative patterns responsive to magnetic fields
Quantification of dissipation linked to pattern formation
Abstract
Materials with continuous dissipation can exhibit responses and functionalities that are not possible in thermodynamic equilibrium. While this concept is well-known, a major challenge has been the implementation: how to rationally design materials with functional non-equilibrium states and quantify the dissipation? Here we address these questions for the widely used colloidal nanoparticles that convey several functionalities. We propose that useful non-equilibrium states can be realised by creating and maintaining steady-state nanoparticle concentration gradients by continuous injection and dissipation of energy. We experimentally demonstrate this with superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles that in thermodynamic equilibrium form a homogeneous functional fluid with a strong magnetic response (a ferrofluid). To create non-equilibrium functionalities, we charge the nanoparticles with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Characterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles
