“…In the context of molecular diagnosis, magnetic particles have been applied for mixing fluids, selectively capturing, concentrating, transferring, and labelling targeted analytes, performing stringency and washing steps, and probing biophysical properties of analytes [37,38,39,46,47,48]. In this tasks, magnetic separation offers a variety of advantages, including high-throughput, low costs, energy consumption efficiency, increased specificity, stability, and sensitivity [27,31,49], and it has been intensively used, since most biological materials are not susceptible to magnetic fields and the magnetic particles can be easily separated from the reaction mixture and re-dispersed after the removal of the magnetic field [30].…”