Cilial pumping is a potent mechanism used to control and manipulate fluids on microscales. Recently, we introduced an electronically driven μ-cilial platform that can create arbitrary flow patterns in liquids near a surface with the potential for various engineering applications. This μ-cilial platform, however, utilized the coupling between elasticity and viscous drag to obtain pumping and had several limitations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiological and artificial microswimmers often self-propel in external flows of vortical nature; relevant examples include algae in small-scale ocean eddies, spermatozoa in uterine peristaltic flows and bacteria in microfluidic devices. A recent experiment has shown that swimming bacteria in model vortices are expelled from the vortex all the way to a well-defined depletion zone (A. Sokolov and I.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCilial pumping is a powerful strategy used by biological organisms to control and manipulate fluids at the microscale. However, despite numerous recent advances in optically, magnetically and electrically driven actuation, development of an engineered cilial platform with the potential for applications has remained difficult to realize. Here we report on active metasurfaces of electronically actuated artificial cilia that can create arbitrary flow patterns in liquids near a surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCellular appendages conferring motility, such as flagella and cilia, are known to synchronise their periodic beats. The origin of synchronization is a combination of long-range hydrodynamic interactions with physical mechanisms allowing the phases of these biological oscillators to evolve. Two of such mechanisms have been identified by previous work, the elastic compliance of the periodic orbit or oscillations driven by phase-dependent biological forcing, both of which can lead generically to stable phase locking.
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