Login / Signup

Inferring non-equilibrium interactions from tracer response near confined active Janus particles.

Jaideep KaturiWilliam E UspalMihail N PopescuSamuel Sanchez
Published in: Science advances (2021)
Chemically active Janus particles sustain non-equilibrium spatial variations in the chemical composition of the suspending solution; these induce hydrodynamic flow and (self-)motility of the particles. Direct mapping of these fields has so far proven to be too challenging. Therefore, indirect methods are needed, e.g., deconvolving the response of "tracer" particles to the activity-induced fields. Here, we study experimentally the response of silica particles, sedimented at a wall, to active Pt/silica Janus particles. The latter are either immobilized at the wall, with the symmetry axis perpendicular or parallel to the wall, or motile. The experiments reveal complex effective interactions that are dependent on the configuration and on the state of motion of the active particle. Within the framework of a coarse-grained model, the behavior of tracers near an immobilized Janus particle can be captured qualitatively once activity-induced osmotic flows on the wall are considered.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • pet imaging
  • escherichia coli
  • oxidative stress
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • high speed