Abstract

Dielectrophoresis can move small particles using the force resulting from their polarization in a divergent electric field. In liquids, it has most often been applied to micrometric objects such as biological cells or latex microspheres. For smaller particles, the dielectrophoretic force becomes very small and the phenomenon is furthermore perturbed by Brownian motion. Whereas dielectrophoresis has been used for assembly of superstructures of nanoparticles and for the detection of proteins and nucleic acids, the mechanisms underlying DEP of such small objects require further study. This work presents measurements of the alternating-current (AC) dielectrophoretic response of gold nanoparticles of less than 200 nm diameter in water. An original dark-field digital video-microscopic method was developed and used in combination with a microfluidic device containing transparent thin-film electrodes. It was found that the dielectrophoretic force is only effective in a small zone very close to the tip of the electrodes, and that Brownian motion actually facilitates transport of particles towards this zone. Moreover, the fact that particles as small as 80 nm are still efficiently captured in our device is not only due to Brownian transport but also to an effective polarizability that is larger than what would be expected on basis of current theory for a sphere in a dielectric medium.

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