Table 1.
Separation principle | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
Magnetic collection | Fast, high throughput, process control | Recovery of MPs, multiple steps | Target purification (HGMS, OGMS) | Safarik et al., 2001; Brown et al., 2013; Fraga García et al., 2015; Müller et al., 2015; Schwaminger et al., 2019a |
Magnetic flocculation | Fast, filtration | Inclusion of impurities, recovery, polymerbeads | Harvest | Svoboda, 1982; Wang et al., 2014 |
Magnetic flotation | Fast, separation, recovery | Aeration limitation, foaming, blockage | Purification, harvest (GAMS, GASE) | Li et al., 2013, 2014; Dong et al., 2015; Liu et al., 2016 |
Magnetic sedimentation | Separation, low loss of MP, characterization | Small scale, low density beads, energy (Centrifuge) | Magnetic centrifuge | Scherer et al., 2002; Berret et al., 2007; Lindner and Nirschl, 2014; Mykhaylyk et al., 2015 |
Magnetic sorting | Different shapes, sizes or magnetizations | Slow, small scale, expensive | Cell sorting | Miltenyi and Schmitz, 2000; Chen et al., 2017; Zhang et al., 2017; Solsona et al., 2018 |
Magnetic stabilized bed | Continuous, homogeneous bed | Pressure drop, reactor size, field circulation, diffusion | Processing (MSBR) | Albert and Tien, 1985; Rosensweig and Ciprios, 1991; Zong et al., 2013 |
The advantages and the disadvantages of magnetic separation strategies are shown. The separator setups where these strategies can be applied are displayed.