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Self-propulsion of a grain-filled dimer in a vertically vibrated channel.

C XuNing ZhengL-P WangL-S LiQ-F ShiZhiyue Lu
Published in: Scientific reports (2017)
Steady dissipation of energy is a crucial property that distinguishes active particles from Brownian particles. However, it is not straightforward to explicitly model the dissipative property of existing active particles driven by a vibrating plate. We present a novel active particle that can be explicitly modeled by Newtonian dynamics of a conservative force field plus two asymmetrical dissipative terms. The particle is a dimer consisting of two ping-pong balls connected by a rigid rod, and its two balls are filled with granular particles of the same total mass but of different grain size. This dimer placed on a vibrating plate exhibits 3 types of motion - by tuning the frequency and the amplitude of the vibration, the dimer undergoes either a directed motion toward the small (or large) grain-filled side or an unbiased random motion. We investigate the various modes of motion both experimentally and numerically and show that the directed motion is a result of the asymmetric damping due to the size difference in the filling grains. Furthermore, the numerical simulation reveals that the dimer's dynamics in either directed motion mode resembles a limit cycle attractor that is independent of its initial condition.
Keyphrases
  • high speed
  • single molecule