Abstract

The performance of nanoscale magnetic devices is often limited by the presence of thermal fluctuations, whereas in micro- and nanofluidic applications the same fluctuations may be used to spread reactants or drugs. Here, we demonstrate the controlled motion and the enhancement of diffusion of magnetic nanoparticles that are manipulated and driven across a series of Bloch walls within an epitaxially grown ferrite garnet film. We use a rotating magnetic field to generate a traveling wave potential that unidirectionally transports the nanoparticles at a frequency tunable speed. Strikingly, we find an enhancement of diffusion along the propulsion direction and a frequency-dependent diffusion coefficient that can be precisely controlled by varying the system parameters. To explain the reported phenomena, we develop a theoretical approach that shows a fair agreement with the experimental data enabling an exact analytical expression for the enhanced diffusivity above the magnetically modulated periodic landscape. Our technique to control thermal fluctuations of driven magnetic nanoparticles represents a versatile and powerful way to programmably transport magnetic colloidal matter in a fluid, opening the doors to different fluidic applications based on exploiting magnetic domain wall ratchets.

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