Method for producing a film comprising three-dimensional magnetic microstructures
10210995 · 2019-02-19
Assignee
- Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique (Paris, FR)
- Universite Joseph Fourier-Grenoble 1 (Saint Martin d'Hères, FR)
Inventors
- Nora Dempsey (Grenoble, FR)
- Frédéric Dumas-Bouchiat (Feytiat, FR)
- Luiz Fernando Zanini (Paris, FR)
- Dominique Givord (Grenoble, FR)
Cpc classification
B03C1/034
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C39/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B03C2201/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C51/002
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/0668
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2083/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/0816
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502761
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C51/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01F41/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method for producing a film including a non-magnetic matrix and a plurality of three-dimensional magnetic microstructures arranged within the matrix according to a predetermined pattern. The method includes providing a master substrate with a magnetically structured face formed from a plurality of magnetic field micro-sources, having a magnetic field gradient of between 10.sup.2 and 10.sup.6 T/m. The method also includes adding magnetic microparticles or nanoparticles to the magnetically structured face of the master substrate, the particles agglomerating into three-dimensional microstructures arranged under an effect of an attractive magnetophoretic force exerted by the magnetic field gradient on the surface of the master substrate. The method further includes depositing, on the magnetically structured face of the master substrate, a matrix made from a non-magnetic material, in such a way as to enclose the arranged microstructures and to form the film and peeling the film from the master substrate.
Claims
1. A method comprising producing a film, wherein said film comprises a non-magnetic matrix and three-dimensional magnetic microstructures arranged within said matrix according to a predetermined pattern, wherein producing said film comprises providing a master substrate, applying particles to a magnetically-structured face of said master substrate, and, after having applied said particles, providing said non-magnetic matrix on said magnetically-structured face and on said magnetic microstructures, and peeling said film from said master substrate, wherein providing said non-magnetic matrix comprises at least one of casting and depositing on said magnetically-structured face and on said magnetic microstructures, wherein said magnetically-structured face is formed from magnetic-field micro-sources having a magnetic-field gradient of between 10.sup.2 and 10.sup.6 teslas per meter, wherein, as a result of having at least one of casted and deposited said non-magnetic matrix, said film forms on said master substrate, wherein said matrix is made from a non-magnetic material, wherein said particles are selected from said group consisting of magnetic microparticles and magnetic nanoparticles, wherein said particles agglomerate into said microstructures, and wherein said microstructures are arranged in response to an attractive magnetophoretic force exerted by a magnetic-field gradient on a surface of said master substrate.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising depositing a layer on said magnetically-structured face, wherein depositing said layer occurs before applying said particles, and wherein depositing said layer facilitates subsequent peeling of film from said master substrate.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising agitating said master substrate after having applied said particles.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising applying a gas jet to said master substrate, wherein applying said gas jet occurs before providing said non-magnetic matrix, and wherein applying said gas jet comprises applying said gas jet in a manner that results in at least one of optimizing a distribution of said particles in relation to said micro-sources and eliminating particles not trapped by a magnetic field of said master substrate.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising depositing a liquid-phase ligand on said micro-structures in such a way as to reinforce mechanical cohesion of said particles that form said microstructures, wherein depositing said liquid-phase ligand is carried out prior to providing said non-magnetic matrix on said magnetically-structured face and on said magnetic microstructures.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after having peeled said film, depositing an electrically conducting material on at least a part of a surface of said film.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising winding said film to form a tube.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein said matrix comprises thermoplastic material, wherein said method further comprises shaping said matrix against a mold by thermoforming, and wherein shaping said matrix occurs after having peeled said film.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after having provided said matrix on said magnetically-structured face of said master substrate and on said microstructures, allowing said matrix to at least one of harden and reticulate.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein providing said matrix comprises pouring said matrix on said magnetically-structured face and on said microstructures.
11. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing said matrix in fluid form, wherein providing said matrix comprises pouring said matrix on said magnetically-structured face and on said microstructures and spreading said matrix, which is in fluid form, over said magnetically-structured face.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein providing said matrix comprises spin-coating said matrix, which is in fluid form, over said magnetically-structured face.
13. An article of manufacture comprising a use for the film recited in claim 1, said article of manufacture comprising first and second films assembled together, wherein said first film comprises a cavity, wherein said second film is assembled with said first film to close said cavity and to form a microfluidic channel, and wherein at least one of said first and second films comprises said film.
14. The article of manufacture of claim 13, wherein said microfluidic channel comprises magnetically-structured walls as a result of said first and second films each having a magnetically-structured surface.
15. The method of claim 1, further comprising selecting a material from which said matrix is to be made, wherein said material is selected from the group consisting of an elastomer, a thermosetting material, a metal, carbon, an oxide, polydimethylsiloxane, rubber, methyl polymethacrylate, parylene, polystyrene, polyester, epoxy resin, thermosetting phenol formaldehyde resin, a photosensitive resin, SiO.sub.2, Al.sub.2O.sub.3, HfO.sub.2, a metal, a carbon material, copper, silver, graphite, and diamond-like carbon.
16. The method of claim 1, wherein said magnetically-structured face of said master substrate has at least one cavity and/or at least one projection, in such a way that, after the peeling, the film has a projection and/or a cavity respectively complementary to the cavity and/or projection of the master substrate.
17. The method of claim 1, further comprising applying an external magnetic-field to said film in such a way as to magnetize said three-dimensional magnetic microstructures enclosed in said matrix, thereby forming a magnetic device comprising a plurality of micro-magnets.
18. An apparatus for using the film recited in claim 1, said apparatus comprising a conveyor belt for passage of powder from which magnetic particles are to be recovered, said conveyor belt having a surface that is in contact with said powder, wherein at least a part of said surface comprises said film, wherein said film comprises a non-magnetic matrix and a plurality of three-dimensional magnetic microstructures arranged within said matrix according to a predetermined pattern, said microstructures being formed from an agglomerate of magnetic microparticles or nanoparticles.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will become evident from the detailed description which follows, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
(2)
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(10) In order to render them more easily understandable, the diagrams have not been drawn to scale.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(11) With reference to
(12) Master Substrate
(13) Said master substrate 1 has a magnetically structured face, i.e. a face 10 formed from a plurality of magnetic field micro-sources 10a, 10b.
(14) The magnetization of the different micro-sources is indicated schematically by an arrow.
(15) In
(16) However, in certain embodiments of the invention, it may be preferable to use a master substrate of which the face is not plane, but has cavities or projections, in order to reproduce complementary projections or cavities in the film formed from the master substrate.
(17) The master substrate may be produced by different techniques known to the person skilled in the art.
(18) According to one embodiment, the production of the master substrate entails the implementation of two main successive steps: the synthesis of a powerful magnetic film over a thickness in the order of 1 to 100 m; the implementation of micromagnets through magnetic structuring of said film.
(19) In a particularly advantageous manner, the synthesis of the magnetic film may be carried out through physical triode pulverization deposition.
(20) By way of example, layers of NdFeB and SmCo have been synthesized and have notable magnetic properties [Dempsey07, Walther08].
(21) Other methods for producing magnets in layers can be envisaged, in particular electrolytic depositions, sol-gel depositions, evaporation depositions, pulsed laser deposition, etc.
(22) From the film thus synthesized, the generation of substantial magnetic fields and magnetic field gradients requires a submillimetric-scale magnetic structuring.
(23) Two techniques presented below can be used for this purpose.
(24) On the one hand, magnetic structuring by the topographic method consists of structuring, before deposition, the surface topology of the substrate on which the magnetic material is then deposited and/or directly structuring the topology of the magnetic layer.
(25) This entails forming a magnetic layer which is not plane, but which comprises micro-projections and/or micro-cavities.
(26) The dimensions of the topographic structuring determine the dimensions of the micromagnets obtained.
(27) Each magnetic film element etched and/or deposited on a micro-projection or in a micro-cavity of the substrate can be likened, following magnetization, to an independent micromagnet.
(28) It should be noted that optical lithography, chemical etching and planarization steps may be necessary.
(29) The micro-elements implemented in this way are then magnetized according to a chosen direction.
(30) They then form a set of independent micromagnets, all having the same direction of magnetization.
(31) In this method, the magnetic material may be hard, in which case the magnetization of the micromagnets is permanent and the master substrate is then autonomous, i.e. does not require any energy supply or any application of an external magnetic field.
(32) Alternatively, the magnetic material used is a soft material.
(33) In this case, the use of the master substrate requires the simultaneous application of an external magnetic field in order to magnetize the micromagnets.
(34) These individual micromagnets, located at different heights in relation to a medial surface of the magnetic film, form systems having very strong magnetic field gradients on micrometric scales.
(35) On the other hand, magnetic structuring through Thermo-Magnetic Patterning (TMP) consists of using a heat source to locally heat certain areas of a magnetically hard layer and thus create magnetization volumes of alternate directions, forming micromagnets.
(36) By way of example, a nanosecond pulse laser can be used as a heat source.
(37) A hard magnetic layer is magnetized in a given direction and course.
(38) This layer is then placed in a uniform external magnetic field H.sub.ext (.sub.0H.sub.ext<.sub.0H.sub.c) with a direction opposite to the direction of the original magnetization, then it is locally irradiated by a KrF (248 nm) excimer pulse laser.
(39) The temperature on the surface of the irradiated areas increases very rapidly, then the heat is diffused into the material.
(40) Given the reduction in the coercitive field .sub.0H.sub.c of a material when its temperature increases, the magnetic reversal of the irradiated areas can be obtained through application of an external magnetic field during the laser pulse.
(41) The layer is ultimately formed from a network of micromagnets with alternate magnetizations and dimensions defined by the dimensions of the mask used during the laser irradiation.
(42) Alternatively, the layer can be heated through laser irradiation in the absence of a magnetic field. In this case, the irradiated areas will be demagnetized, which also causes the creation of a strong magnetic field gradient. In some cases, the irradiated areas can be magnetized by the magnetic field of the layer itself.
(43) The systems implemented by this method have very strong magnetic field gradients on micrometric scales.
(44) This thermo-magnetic patterning principle can be extended to all types of hard magnetic layers, including those having isotropic or in-plane magnetizations.
(45) Other embodiments of the master substrate can obviously be chosen by the person skilled in the art without departing from the framework of the present invention.
(46) Thus, for example, a structured magnetic film produced according to the inventive method can in turn be used as a master substrate.
(47) According to a different example, the master substrate may be formed from a plurality of conducting microcoils.
(48) In a non-limiting example shown in
(49) The NdFeB alloy of the layer 11 has been treated by thermo-magnetic patterning, i.e. a localized heating of the layer 11 through laser irradiation through a mask in the presence of an external magnetic field, in such a way as to form, in the openings of the mask, regions 10a of magnetization opposite to that of the regions 10b protected by the mask.
(50) On the surface of the master substrate, the intensity of the magnetic field and the magnetic field gradient is maximal at the interfaces between the regions 10a, 10b having opposite magnetizations.
(51) Consequently, nanoparticles or microparticles having a positive magnetic susceptibility are attracted by the magnetophoretic force towards these interfaces.
(52) However, the master substrate is not limited to this particular form, but may be formed from a hard or soft magnetic material structured by topography.
(53) The master substrate may possibly be formed from a network of microcoils.
(54) When the master substrate has a surface structured by topography, i.e. non-plane, this particular topography can be used to imprint a form complementary to the final film.
(55) If a plane film is to be formed from such a master substrate, it is necessary to planarize the latter in advance, either by removing material (for example by means of mechano-chemical polishing to remove the projections), or by adding material (for example by means of a technique to fill the cavities).
(56) Magnetic Nanoparticles/Microparticles
(57) With reference to
(58) This application of particles can be carried out by any appropriate technique; this may involve, for example, a dusting (in the case of a dry particulate powder), a casting (in the case of particles in suspension in a fluid), etc.
(59) Under the effect of the attractive magnetophoretic force of the magnetically structured face of the master substrate, the particles agglomerate at the edges of the micro-sources.
(60) The agglomerates are therefore distributed according to a pattern which corresponds to the pattern of the edges of the magnetic field micro-sources of the master substrate.
(61) Insofar as the force decreases with movement away from the face of the master substrate, these agglomerates generally have a triangular or trapezoidal cross section, with a wider base on the side of the master substrate 1 and reducing with the distance.
(62) In order to facilitate the arrangement of the particles not only in a plane but also in a direction perpendicular to the master substrate, it is possible to simultaneously apply an external magnetic field having an appropriate direction.
(63)
(64) During the deposition of the particles, the master substrate is advantageously agitated in such a way as to optimize the trapping of the particles at the edges of the magnetic field micro-sources.
(65) Furthermore, during or after the deposition, a jet of dry gas can be projected in order to facilitate the trapping of the particles at said interfaces and/or to eliminate the untrapped particles before the deposition of the non-magnetic matrix.
(66) According to one embodiment, the particles are made from a soft magnetic material.
(67) In this case, during the use of the film containing them, it will be necessary to apply an external magnetic field in order to magnetize them.
(68) According to a different embodiment, the particles are made from a hard magnetic material.
(69) In this case, the application, after the formation of the film, of an external magnetic field will allow them to be magnetized in a permanent manner and thus form an autonomous magnetically structured film.
(70) When the particles have been applied to the master substrate by means of a fluid, said fluid is evaporated once the particles have been arranged under the effect of the magnetophoretic force.
(71) According to one embodiment shown in
(72) The agglomerates are thus less susceptible to being deformed during the subsequent formation of the matrix.
(73) By way of a non-limiting example, an appropriate ligand is an SIS (styrene-isoprene-styrene) copolymer diluted in toluene: the SIS copolymer bonds to the agglomerated particles when the toluene is evaporated.
(74) Non-Magnetic Matrix
(75) With reference to
(76) The matrix is advantageously in the form of a fluid which, once poured onto the master substrate, can be spread over the surface of the latter by a spin-coating method.
(77) The thickness of the matrix is typically between 100 nm and 5 mm.
(78) The matrix is advantageously made from an elastomer material, which enables a certain flexibility to be imparted onto the film.
(79) However, a rigid matrix may be preferable in other applications.
(80) According to preferred embodiments of the invention, the matrix is made from one of the following materials: an elastomer (for example polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), rubber, etc.), a thermoplastic material (for example methyl polymethacrylate (PMMA), parylene, polystyrene, etc.), a thermosetting material (for example polyester, epoxy resin, Bakelite, photosensitive resin (for example SU-8), etc.), oxides such as SiO.sub.2 or Al.sub.2O.sub.3, metals, such as Cu or Ag, carbon materials, such as graphite or DLC (Diamond-Like Carbon), etc.
(81) If necessary, the matrix is allowed to harden or reticulate during an appropriate period.
(82) According to the subsequent applications of the film, it may be appropriate to choose a biocompatible material (e.g. PDMS) for the matrix, or to add a fine layer of a biocompatible material (for example, a layer of PDMS by spin coating, or a layer of parylene through vapor-phase deposition).
(83) Furthermore, the matrix may advantageously be made from a transparent or translucent material.
(84) The person skilled in the art is capable of selecting an appropriate matrix from the products available on the market according to the desired properties.
(85) Film Obtained
(86) With reference to
(87) The master substrate may, for its part, be reused for the production of a new film.
(88) Thus, although the master substrate requires the implementation of micromanufacturing techniques and consequently incurs a certain cost, it can be reused indefinitely and the production of the film itself, which does not involve such complex and costly techniques, only uses low-cost materials.
(89) Furthermore, this method can easily be industrialized and enables the implementation of films with a large surface area in large quantities and at a low cost.
(90) According to one embodiment of the invention, a layer of a material facilitating the peeling of the film can be deposited on the master substrate, before applying the particles.
(91) This layer which facilitates the peeling preferably remains attached to the master substrate during the peeling.
(92) This layer is, for example, made from parylene, Teflon, etc.
(93)
(94) Even a very low thickness of the layer 5 enables the functions described above to be performed.
(95) Thus, for example, the layer 5 may have a thickness of less than 1 mm, preferably between 10 nm and 10 m, more preferably between 50 nm and 500 nm.
(96) Following the peeling of the film from the master substrate, it is possible to render at least a part of the surface of the film enclosing the microparticles or nanoparticles as electrically conducting, by means of a deposition of an electrically conducting material.
(97) The electrically conducting material is chosen according to its adhesive properties in relation to the material of the matrix and/or according to a possible need for transparency.
(98) For example, a transparent conducting oxide, such as tin-doped indium oxide (ITO), is advantageously deposited for a transparent conducting layer.
(99) If the electrically conducting layer does not need to be transparent, said layer may comprise a metal such as gold, platinum and/or palladium.
(100) Moreover, according to the applications, an electrically conducting layer can be deposited over the entire surface of the film, or only on certain regions of the surface, according to a predetermined pattern, for example in order to locally form electrodes (for the application of an electrical field) or coils (for the application of a magnetic field).
(101) In this last case, micromanufacturing techniques (deposition, lithography, etching, etc.) can be used for the microstructuring of the conducting layer.
(102) According to one embodiment shown in
(103) In the non-limiting example shown in
(104) For example, said projection may have a parallelepiped shape.
(105) According to the intended applications, the remainder of the surface of the master substrate may also be magnetically structured, but it is also conceivable that only the surface of the projection 10 is magnetically structured; in this last case, the applied nanoparticles or microparticles are only agglomerated at the edges of the magnetic micro-sources forming the surface of the projection 10, the remainder of the surface of the master substrate not retaining any particles.
(106) As explained above, the magnetic nanoparticles or microparticles, which are arranged and agglomerated in three-dimensional structures 20 on the edges of the magnetic field micro-sources 10a, 10b, are applied to the master substrate (
(107) Then, with reference to
(108) At the end of the peeling, the film 4 thus obtained, as shown in
(109) According to the shape of the embossing, the film thus comprises one or more wells, or one or more channels.
(110) A fluid microchannel can thus be formed from a film of this type.
(111) For this purpose, as shown in
(112) Advantageously, said plane film 4 can also be produced according to the invention and can comprise three-dimensional magnetic structures 20 on its surface.
(113) Thus, a device 6 comprising a microchannel 60 which has a magnetically structured surface on two opposite walls 61a and 61b is formed from the films 4 and 4.
(114) A surface treatment can ensure that the two films are sealed.
(115) For example, when the two films have a PDMS matrix, an activation of the surfaces by an oxygen plasma can be effected.
(116) Due to the presence of three-dimensional magnetic structures on the two faces 61a and 61b of the microchannel 61, the trapping of nanoparticles or microparticles in a solution flowing in said microchannel is improved.
(117) The nature of the magnetic particles, and also their distribution in relation to the surface of each wall, can obviously be identical or different for each of the two walls.
(118)
(119) When the matrix 3 is made from a flexible material, for example an elastomer, it is possible to wind the film over itself to form a tube.
(120) According to the intended use, the film 4 can be wound in such a way that the three-dimensional magnetic structures are located on the external wall of the tube 7 or on the internal wall of the latter (as shown in
(121) In the case of a thermoplastic matrix, the film can be heated to wind it.
(122) Another possibility for shaping the film containing the microparticles, when the matrix comprises a thermoplastic material, is to produce a plane film and then thermoform it (hot embossing).
(123)
(124) A plane film 4 is produced from a master substrate, the magnetically structured face of which is plane, according to the method described above.
(125) In the example shown in
(126) The matrix is made from a thermoplastic material, for example PMMA or polystyrene.
(127) A mold 8 is provided, the surface of which is complementary to the shape to be imprinted on the film 4.
(128) For example, if a channel is to be formed from the film 4, the mold 8 has a parallelepiped relief, of which the width corresponds to the width of the channel to be formed and the height corresponds to the depth of the channel.
(129) The face of the film 4 in the region of which the microstructures are disposed is applied against the mold 8 under temperature and pressure conditions that are appropriate according to the material of the matrix, in order to impart the shape of the mold 8 on the film 4 without deforming said mold, the latter being made from a material resistant to thermoforming.
(130)
(131) The deformation of the surface of the film is accompanied by the shaping of the lines of microstructures according to the relief of the mold.
(132)
(133) In contrast to the use of a non-plane substrate, thermoforming therefore enables the formation of a cavity 40 of which all the walls (including the walls perpendicular to the main plane of the master substrate) comprise microstructures.
(134) A fluid microchannel can therefore be formed from a film of this type.
(135) For this purpose, as shown in
(136) Advantageously, said plane film 4 can also be produced according to the invention and can comprise three-dimensional magnetic structures 20 on its surface.
(137) A device 6 comprising a microchannel 60 which has a magnetically structured surface on its four walls 61a, 61b, 61c and 61d is thus formed from the films 4 and 4.
(138) A surface treatment can ensure that the two films are sealed.
(139) Due to the presence of three-dimensional magnetic structures on the four faces 61a to 61d of the microchannel 60, the trapping of nano-objects or micro-objects in a solution flowing in said microchannel is improved.
(140) Experimental Results
(141) The method described above has been carried out to produce a PDMS film enclosing the NdFeB microparticles.
(142) Particles of this type are, for example, sold by the company Magnequench under the reference MQFP-B.
(143) These particles have an irregular shape and a diameter varying between 1 and 10 m, around a mean diameter in the order of 5 m.
(144) These particles, which are formed from randomly oriented nanocrystals, are magnetically isotropic (0Mr in the order of 0.8 T).
(145) As explained in detail above, these particles were applied to the magnetically structured face of a master substrate (the micro-sources being disposed in the form of a chessboard, each square of which has sides measuring 100 m), then a PDMS matrix was deposited.
(146) In this example, the three-dimensional structures have a depth (in the thickness of the film) in the order of 5 m and a maximum width (in the face of the film previously in contact with the master substrate) in the order of 20 m.
(147) Adjacent structures are separated by an interval of around 100 m, which corresponds to the width of the magnetic field micro-sources of the master substrate.
(148)
(149) The structures 20 can be seen to be distributed there in the shape of a square pattern corresponding to the edges of the magnetic field micro-sources.
(150) Following production, the film was exposed to a 4T external magnetic field, in such a way as to magnetize the NdFeB particles.
(151) In fact, the magnetic field of the master substrate is, in this case, too weak to sufficiently magnetize these particles with a high magnetocrystalline anisotropy.
(152) To show that the film thus formed can be used to trap magnetic microparticles, a solution based on fluorescent polystyrene microspheres having a diameter of 2.9 m and containing around 30% by volume of superparamagnetic iron oxide inclusions, sold by the company Micro-particles GmbH, was deposited on the film and left to dry. These particles are considered as forming appropriate models for cells.
(153) Magnetization measures carried out on these microspheres show that the iron oxide inclusions have a size of 3.3 nm3 nm (standard deviation).
(154) A fluorescence image in top view (
(155) Other tests were carried out with a polystyrene matrix and with a polyester matrix and demonstrated the feasibility of the film and its capacity for trapping magnetic particles.
(156) Examples of Applications Relating to the Processing of Powders
(157) Beyond the handling (trapping, separation, positioning, etc.) of magnetically functionalized biological species, the magnetophoretic properties of the magnetic microstructures organized in the matrix can be used to recover particles with positive magnetic (ferromagnetic, ferrimagnetic or paramagnetic) susceptibility within a powder.
(158) According to the applications, this recovery can aim to extract particles of a material to be recycled from a powder, or, conversely, to clean a powder by removing particles of a contaminant material.
(159) For this purpose, said powder is made to pass over a conveyor belt, at least part of the surface of which comprises a film as described above.
(160) Thus, when said powder contains particles having a sufficient positive magnetic susceptibility, said particles are retained on the surface of the film.
(161) The dimension of the particles to be recovered is typically between 50 nm and 50 m.
(162) It is preferably ensured that the powder is in contact with the largest possible film surface containing three-dimensional microstructures, in order to increase the probability of trapping the particles to be recovered by said microstructures.
(163)
(164) The device 9 advantageously comprises an enclosure 90 which confines the powder, in such a way as to avoid or limit the exposure of external operators to the powder.
(165) One or more conveyor belts 90, on the surface of which one or more films 4 comprising a non-magnetic matrix enclosing the arranged three-dimensional magnetic microstructures are disposed, are arranged within the enclosure.
(166) The powder P is supplied, for example, at the top of the enclosure.
(167) The powder P may be in dry form or in liquid phase.
(168) The conveyor belts 90 are preferably inclined and disposed alternately in such a way as to make the powder travel over the largest possible surface of the conveyor belts.
(169) A receptacle 92 is disposed at the end of the furthest downstream conveyor belt in order to collect the untrapped powder.
(170) According to one embodiment, the microstructures can be formed from the same nanoparticles or microparticles and can be disposed according to the same pattern for all films.
(171) In this case, if the particles to be recovered are made from a plurality of different materials, a segregation of the trapping is observed from the upstream to the downstream areas of the device, the particles formed from the material having the highest positive magnetic susceptibility tending to be trapped first.
(172) According to one advantageous alternative, the segregation can be controlled by choosing the particles forming the microstructures and their arrangement in relation to the surface of each film 9 and the conveyor belts 91 in such a way as to generate different magnetic field gradients according to the location on the conveyor belt, adapted to preferentially trap certain particles.
(173) Any appropriate means can be used to free the particles trapped on the conveyor belts.
(174) This may involve mechanical means to detach the particles from the surface of the film 4, for example by means of a scraper.
(175) Another possibility, if the microstructures are made from a soft magnetic material magnetized by an external magnetic field, is to interrupt the generation of this magnetic field; the microstructures thus lose their magnetization and no longer exert any attraction on the trapped particles. It is then possible to recover said particles through mechanical agitation (aspiration, shaking, blowing, etc.), for example.
(176) A first example relates to the recovery of particles of relevant materials within a powder.
(177) For example, said particles may contain rare earths.
(178) In fact, the demand for rare earths is so high that it becomes economically viable to collect these elements in environments where they are present in small quantities.
(179) For example, the recycling of iron-boron-neodymium magnets produces a powder of this alloy.
(180) Similarly, the production of such magnets produces powders of this alloy, which it would be economically viable to recover.
(181) With these particles being ferromagnetic, it is possible to trap them by means of films as described above.
(182) The inventors furthermore discovered that it was possible to trap paramagnetic rare earth oxide powders, for example neodymium and samarium oxide.
(183) This result opens the way to the recovery of rare earth oxides from mines of other materials where they are encountered, for example phosphate mines.
(184) It is also possible to recover particles having a sufficiently high positive magnetic susceptibility, for example platinum and/or palladium particles.
(185) The material of the nanoparticles or microparticles can be chosen to have a sufficient magnetization according to the magnetic susceptibility of the particles to be attracted.
(186) It may be possible to increase the paramagnetic magnetization of the particles to be attracted by applying an external magnetic field, for example by means of a solid magnet, an electromagnet and/or a superconducting coil.
(187) Another example of an application of the invention is the decontamination of a powder, comprising the recovery of contaminant or pollutant particles from within a powder.
(188) The decontamination of kaolin powder, with the aim of removing the ferromagnetic or paramagnetic particles, can be cited as an example.
(189) Another example of decontamination is that of nuclear waste in powder form.
(190) Insofar as such waste has a low magnetic susceptibility, it is preferable to functionalize it with ferromagnetic, ferrimagnetic or superparamagnetic particles which can be trappedwith the waste to which they are attachedby the films according to the invention.
(191) As the films are particularly inexpensive, it is possible to remove them from the conveyor belts once they are saturated with particles, to store them under appropriate conditions, and to replace them on the conveyor belts with new films.
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