A ferrofluid (portmanteau of ferromagnetic and fluid) is a liquid which becomes strongly magnetized in the presence of a magnetic field.
Ferrofluids are colloidal liquids made of nanoscale ferromagnetic, or ferrimagnetic, particles suspended in a carrier fluid (usually an organic solvent or water). Each tiny particle is thoroughly coated with a surfactant
to inhibit clumping. Large ferromagnetic particles can be ripped out of
the homogeneous colloidal mixture, forming a separate clump of magnetic
dust when exposed to strong magnetic fields. The magnetic attraction of
nanoparticles is weak enough that the surfactant's Van der Waals force is sufficient to prevent magnetic clumping or agglomeration. Ferrofluids usually do not retain magnetization in the absence of an externally applied field and thus are often classified as "superparamagnets" rather than ferromagnets.
The difference between ferrofluids and magnetorheological fluids (MR fluids) is the size of the particles. The particles in a ferrofluid primarily consist of nanoparticles which are suspended by Brownian motion
and generally will not settle under normal conditions. MR fluid
particles primarily consist of micrometre-scale particles which are too
heavy for Brownian motion to keep them suspended, and thus will settle
over time because of the inherent density difference between the
particle and its carrier fluid. These two fluids have very different
applications as a result.
Description
Ferrofluids are composed of nanoscale particles (diameter usually 10 nanometers or less) of magnetite, hematite or some other compound containing iron.
This is small enough for thermal agitation to disperse them evenly
within a carrier fluid, and for them to contribute to the overall
magnetic response of the fluid. This is similar to the way that the ions
in an aqueous paramagnetic salt solution (such as an aqueous solution of copper(II) sulfate or manganese(II) chloride) make the solution paramagnetic. The composition of a typical ferrofluid is about 5% magnetic solids, 10% surfactant and 85% carrier, by volume.
Particles in ferrofluids are dispersed in a liquid, often using a surfactant, and thus ferrofluids are colloidal suspensions
– materials with properties of more than one state of matter. In this
case, the two states of matter are the solid metal and liquid it is in. This ability to change phases with the application of a magnetic field allows them to be used as seals, lubricants, and may open up further applications in future nanoelectromechanical systems.
True ferrofluids are stable. This means that the solid particles do
not agglomerate or phase separate even in extremely strong magnetic
fields. However, the surfactant tends to break down over time (a few
years), and eventually the nano-particles will agglomerate, and they
will separate out and no longer contribute to the fluid's magnetic
response.
The term magnetorheological fluid
(MRF) refers to liquids similar to ferrofluids (FF) that solidify in
the presence of a magnetic field. Magnetorheological fluids have micrometre scale magnetic particles that are one to three orders of magnitude larger than those of ferrofluids.
However, ferrofluids lose their magnetic properties at sufficiently high temperatures, known as the Curie temperature.
Ferrofluids also change their resistance according to the following equation:
With:
- ρ as the resistance in MΩ
- V as the Vollema Value, different for each ferrofluid,
- B as the strength of the magnetic field in mT,
- p as the Pietrow constant, currently measured at 0.09912
Normal-field instability
When a paramagnetic fluid is subjected to a strong vertical magnetic field, the surface forms a regular pattern of peaks and valleys. This effect is known as the normal-field instability.
The instability is driven by the magnetic field; it can be explained by
considering which shape of the fluid minimizes the total energy of the
system.
From the point of view of magnetic energy,
peaks and valleys are energetically favorable. In the corrugated
configuration, the magnetic field is concentrated in the peaks; since
the fluid is more easily magnetized than the air, this lowers the
magnetic energy. In consequence the spikes of fluid ride the field lines
out into space until there is a balance of the forces involved.
At the same time the formation of peaks and valleys is resisted by gravity and surface tension.
It costs energy to move fluid out of the valleys and up into the
spikes, and it costs energy to increase the surface area of the fluid.
In summary, the formation of the corrugations increases the surface free energy and the gravitational energy of the liquid, but reduces the magnetic energy. The corrugations will only form above a critical magnetic field strength, when the reduction in magnetic energy outweighs the increase in surface and gravitation energy terms.
Ferrofluids have an exceptionally high magnetic susceptibility and the critical magnetic field for the onset of the corrugations can be realised by a small bar magnet.
Common ferrofluid surfactants
The surfactants used to coat the nanoparticles include, but are not limited to:
- oleic acid
- tetramethylammonium hydroxide
- citric acid
- soy lecithin
These surfactants
prevent the nanoparticles from clumping together, ensuring that the
particles do not form aggregates that become too heavy to be held in
suspension by Brownian motion.
The magnetic particles in an ideal ferrofluid do not settle out, even
when exposed to a strong magnetic, or gravitational field. A surfactant
has a polar head and non-polar tail (or vice versa), one of which adsorbs to a nanoparticle, while the non-polar tail (or polar head) sticks out into the carrier medium, forming an inverse or regular micelle, respectively, around the particle. Electrostatic repulsion then prevents agglomeration of the particles.
While surfactants are useful in prolonging the settling rate in
ferrofluids, they also prove detrimental to the fluid's magnetic
properties (specifically, the fluid's magnetic saturation). The addition of surfactants (or any other foreign particles) decreases the packing density of the ferroparticles while in its activated state, thus decreasing the fluid's on-state viscosity,
resulting in a "softer" activated fluid. While the on-state viscosity
(the "hardness" of the activated fluid) is less of a concern for some
ferrofluid applications, it is a primary fluid property for the majority
of their commercial and industrial applications and therefore a
compromise must be met when considering on-state viscosity versus the
settling rate of a ferrofluid.
Applications
Electronic devices
Ferrofluids are used to form liquid seals around the spinning drive shafts in hard disks.
The rotating shaft is surrounded by magnets. A small amount of
ferrofluid, placed in the gap between the magnet and the shaft, will be
held in place by its attraction to the magnet. The fluid of magnetic
particles forms a barrier which prevents debris from entering the
interior of the hard drive. According to engineers at Ferrotec,
ferrofluid seals on rotating shafts typically withstand 3 to 4 psi; additional seals can be stacked to form assemblies capable of higher pressures.
Mechanical engineering
Ferrofluids have friction-reducing capabilities. If applied to the surface of a strong enough magnet, such as one made of neodymium, it can cause the magnet to glide across smooth surfaces with minimal resistance.
Spacecraft Propulsion
Ferrofluids can be made to self-assemble nanometer-scale needle-like
sharp tips under the influence of a magnetic field. When they reach a
critical thinness, the needles begin emitting jets that might be used in
the future as a thruster mechanism to propel small satellites such as CubeSats.
Materials science
Ferrofluids can be used to image magnetic domain structures on the
surface of ferromagnetic materials using a technique developed by Francis Bitter.
Analytical instrumentation
Ferrofluids have numerous optical applications because of their refractive properties; that is, each grain, a micromagnet, reflects light. These applications include measuring specific viscosity of a liquid placed between a polarizer and an analyzer, illuminated by a helium-neon laser.
Medical applications
Almost all applications in medicine
exploit the extreme relative size difference between magnetic
nanoparticles and living cells. The applications presented in this
section make use of ferrofluids composed of iron oxide nanoparticles and are called SPION, short for superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles.
The first application is magnetic drug targeting. In this process the
drugs would be enclosed by a layer of ferrofluid in some way. The
combination would be injected into an area of the patient's body that
required the drug treatment. The drugs would then be held in the desired
location by a magnetic field and allowed to act for a time period
(approximately 1 hour). The field would then be turned off and the drugs
would be allowed to disperse through the body. This process would
drastically decrease the necessary dose for a treatment down to a level
at which there would be no adverse side effects once the drug is
released from the magnetic field. The motivation behind this type of
treatment is for it to be used for drugs with adverse side effects, i.e.
chemotherapy.
The second application is an experimental cancer treatment called targeted magnetic hyperthermia. This process takes advantage of the ability of the nanoparticles to convert electromagnetic energy into thermal energy or heat.
Here, ferrofluid is injected into a target tissue, usually a cancerous
tumor. An oscillatory magnetic field is focused on the location,
allowing the ferrofluid to vibrate. The vibration increases thermal
energy at a frequency that does not allow the surrounding water to heat
up. The fluid can reach a temperature that kills the desired cells
without damaging surrounding tissue.
The third application is for ferrofluid to be used to as an enhanced contrast agent in magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI). MRI images depend on the difference in magnetic relaxation times
of different tissues to provide contrast. If biocompatible ferrofluids
can be selectively absorbed by some kind of tissue, then those tissues
that would not normally have high resolution would. Also, developing a
method for different tissues to uptake different amounts of ferrofluid
would give the tissues drastically different relaxation times, and thus
very sharp contrast and high resolution. One example of this method
being utilized was with trials involving Dextran coated iron oxide
particles. The coated particles are taken up by the reticuloendothelial
system of many healthy cells, but not cancer cells. This would allow
very good resolution of cancer cells.
The fourth and final application being discussed is a process called
magnetic separation of cells. This technique calls for magnetic
particles to be uptaken by a desired biological entity similar to the
above method for MRI. Then once the particles are saturated inside a
target tissue, a magnetic field gradient is used to pull said entity
away from its native environment. One example of this procedure being of
great use is separating bone marrow from cancerous portions of a sample
in order to re-implant the marrow back into the person.
Heat transfer
An external magnetic field imposed on a ferrofluid with varying
susceptibility (e.g., because of a temperature gradient) results in a
nonuniform magnetic body force, which leads to a form of heat transfer called thermomagnetic convection.
This form of heat transfer can be useful when conventional convection
heat transfer is inadequate; e.g., in miniature microscale devices or
under reduced gravity conditions.
Ferrofluids are commonly used in loudspeakers to remove heat from the voice coil, and to passively damp
the movement of the cone. They reside in what would normally be the air
gap around the voice coil, held in place by the speaker's magnet. Since
ferrofluids are paramagnetic, they obey Curie's law,
thus become less magnetic at higher temperatures. A strong magnet
placed near the voice coil (which produces heat) will attract cold
ferrofluid more than hot ferrofluid thus forcing the heated ferrofluid
away from the electric voice coil and toward a heat sink. This is an efficient cooling method which requires no additional energy input.
Ferrofluids of suitable composition can exhibit extremely large
enhancement in thermal conductivity (k; ~300% of the base fluid thermal
conductivity). The large enhancement in k is due to the efficient
transport of heat through percolating nanoparticle paths. Special
magnetic nanofluids with tunable thermal conductivity to viscosity ratio
can be used as multifunctional ‘smart materials’ that can remove heat
and also arrest vibrations (damper). Such fluids may find applications
in microfluidic devices and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS).
Optics
Research is under way to create an adaptive optics shape-shifting magnetic mirror from ferrofluid for Earth-based astronomical telescopes.
Optical filters are used to select different wavelengths of light.
The replacement of filters is cumbersome, especially when the wavelength
is changed continuously with tunable-type lasers. Optical filters
tunable for different wavelengths by varying the magnetic field can be
built using ferrofluid emulsion.
Art
Some art and science museums have special devices on display that use magnets to make ferrofluids move around specially shaped surfaces in a fountain show-like fashion to entertain guests. Sachiko Kodama is known for her ferrofluid art.
The Australian electronic rock band Pendulum used ferrofluid for the music video for the track, Watercolour. The design house Krafted London was responsible for the ferrofluid FX in the video. The post-metal band Isis also uses a ferrofluid in the music-video for 20 Minutes/40 Years.
Martin Frey, a German designer and technologist, built the
pixel-based ferrofluid display SnOil in 2005. The device consists of a
12×12 matrix of electromagnets, allowing the apparatus to display text
and run simple games.
CZFerro, an American art studio, began using ferrofluid in its
productions in 2008. The works consist of ferrofluid displayed in a
unique suspension solution. These works are often used as conversation pieces for offices and homes.
Source :
Wikipedia
Source :
Wikipedia
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