| Literature DB >> 29472727 |
Lykourgos Bougas1, Lukas D Langenegger2, Carlos A Mora2, Martin Zeltner2, Wendelin J Stark2, Arne Wickenbrock3, John W Blanchard4, Dmitry Budker3,4,5,6.
Abstract
Over the last decades, the use of magnetic nanoparticles in research and commercial applications has increased dramatically. However, direct detection of trace quantities remains a challenge in terms of equipment cost, operating conditions and data acquisition times, especially in flowing conditions within complex media. Here we present the in-line, non-destructive detection of magnetic nanoparticles using high performance atomic magnetometers at ambient conditions in flowing media. We achieve sub-picomolar sensitivities measuring ~30 nm ferromagnetic iron and cobalt nanoparticles that are suitable for biomedical and industrial applications, under flowing conditions in water and whole blood. Additionally, we demonstrate real-time surveillance of the magnetic separation of nanoparticles from water and whole blood. Overall our system has the merit of in-line direct measurement of trace quantities of ferromagnetic nanoparticles with so far unreached sensitivities and could be applied in the biomedical field (diagnostics and therapeutics) but also in the industrial sector.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29472727 PMCID: PMC5823888 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21802-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic diagram of the in-line magnetic sensor used for ferromagnetic particle detection inside a magnetic shield (QuSpin is the atomic magnetometer). (b) Diagrams for the different setups used in this work: Setup (A) uses a syringe pump for fluid displacement. Particles are additionally pre-magnetized with a ring magnet before passing the sensor. In setup (B) solvents are circulated using a peristaltic pump. The fluid can be circulated either in a closed loop without magnetization, or, by switching the three-way valves, through a high-gradient magnet that allows for the magnetic particle separation.
Figure 2Detection of C/Fe3C ferromagnetic particles in water solutions. (a) Real time magnetic-field measurements along the y-axis for pure water (black points) and 20 ppm:water solution of pre-magnetized C/Fe3C nanoparticles (blue points). (b) Magnetic field power spectra for the measurements presented in (a). The black dashed line corresponds to 20.4 fT/ (averaged from 1–100 Hz), indicating the noise floor baseline of the measurement and verifying that the presence of the water does not influence significantly the magnetometer’s sensitivity. (c) Histogram analysis of the measurements shown in (a) and (b), including a box-and-whisker plot analysis for visual comparison of the observed magnetic-field distributions (the white line represents the median marker, the grey boxes the upper and lower 25% quantiles, while the grey bars represent the maximum and minimum acquired data points, including data outliers). For the histogram analysis we employ a digital filter to remove the 50 Hz and 100 Hz power-line-related noise components. All measurements are performed under constant flow conditions, with a flow rate of 10 ml/min.
Figure 3(a) Magnetic field variance signal for different concentrations of the C/Fe3C, C/Co and nanomag-D nanoparticles, under pre-magnetized conditions, in water solutions. (b) Comparison of the magnetic field variance signal between water and blood solutions for different concentrations of the C/Fe3C nanoparticles under pre-magnetized conditions. All measurements are realized under constant flow conditions (10 ml/min). The black dashed lines [(a,b)] represent the baseline for each measurement, obtained for measurements performed with pure water or blood. The solid lines represent fits to the experimental data.
Figure 4Real-time magnetic field measurements demonstrating nanoparticle magnetic separation for two different matrix media: (a) water (upper right and left plots); (b) blood (lower right and left plots). For the measurements we use 20 ppm C/Co:water/blood solutions. The large magnetic fluctuations observed during the separation measurements in blood [b2 in (b)] are attributed to particle agglomeration (see supplementary materials).