The potential applications of block copolymer thin films, utilising their self-assembly capabilities, are enhanced when achieving long-range ordering. In this study we explain the experimental alignment of lamellae under shear flow findings [S. Pujari , 2012, , 5258] and classify the alignment mechanisms based on shear rate and segregation, uncovering similarities to the systems subjected to electric fields, suggesting a common pathway of lamellae orientations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpontaneous capillary imbibition has the potential to improve the performance of many micro and nanodevices since it does not require an external energy source to drive a fluid flow. Despite this advantage, controlling and reducing the friction exerted by the channel walls, which limits the speed of the liquid, remains a challenge. Here, we demonstrate experimentally that infusing the walls of a channel with a liquid lubricant substantially speeds up the imbibition process and reduces the overall viscous friction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin the Landau-Ginzburg picture of phase transitions, scalar field theories develop phase separation because of a spontaneous symmetry-breaking mechanism. This picture works in thermodynamics but also in the dynamics of phase separation. Here we show that scalar nonequilibrium field theories undergo phase separation just because of nonequilibrium fluctuations driven by a persistent noise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of curvature and how it induces and enhances the transport of colloidal particles driven through narrow channels represent an unexplored research avenue. Here we combine experiments and simulations to investigate the dynamics of magnetically driven colloidal particles confined through a narrow, circular channel. We use an external precessing magnetic field to induce a net torque and spin the particles at a defined angular velocity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the flow of an electrolyte through a rigid nanochannel decorated with a surface charge pattern. Employing lattice Boltzmann and dissipative particle dynamics methods, as well as analytical theory, we show that the electrohydrodynamic coupling leads to two distinct flow regimes. The accompanying discontinuous transition between slow, ionic, and fast, Poiseuille flows is observed at intermediate ion concentrations, channel widths, and electrostatic coupling strengths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCorrection for 'The impact of viscosity asymmetry on phase separating binary mixtures with suspended colloids' by Javeria Siddiqui , 2024, , 5564-5571, https://doi.org/10.1039/D3SM00955F.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe establish how active stress globally affects the morphology of disclination lines of a three-dimensional active nematic liquid crystal under chaotic flow. Thanks to a defect detection algorithm based on the local nematic orientation, we show that activity selects a crossover length scale in between the size of small defect loops and that of long and tangled defect lines of fractal dimension 2. This length scale crossover is consistent with the scaling of the average separation between defects as a function of activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActive particles driven by chemical reactions are the subject of intense research to date due to their rich physics, being intrinsically far from equilibrium, and their multiple technological applications. Recent attention in this field is now shifting towards exploring the fascinating dynamics of active and passive mixtures. Here we realize active colloidal rafts, composed of a single catalytic particle encircled by several shells of passive microspheres, and assembled via light-activated chemophoresis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe introduction of neutrally wetting colloidal particles into coarsening binary fluids is known to arrest the dynamics of the phase separation, as the colloids tend to be captured by the growing interfaces to reduce the free energy of the system. This phenomenon has often been studied in systems with symmetric fluid viscosities. In this study, we investigate the behavior of colloidal particles introduced into asymmetric binary fluids with a viscosity contrast.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a technique for measuring the interactions between pairs of colloidal particles in two optical traps. This method is particularly suitable for measuring strongly attractive potentials, an otherwise challenging task. The interaction energy is calculated from the distribution of inter-particle separations by accounting for the contribution from the optical traps with arbitrary trap profiles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA capillarity-induced negative pressure is of general importance for understanding the phase behaviors of liquids in small pores and cracks. A unique example is the embolism in the xylem of plants and the cavitation at the limiting negative pressure generated by evaporation of water from nanocapillaries in the cell walls of leaves. In this work, by combining the effect of a capillary and cavitation together, we demonstrate with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations that capillarity is able to induce spontaneous cavitation in the presence of hydrophobic heterogeneities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith the rapid development of studies involving droplet microfluidics, drug delivery, cell detection, and microparticle synthesis, among others, many scientists have invested significant efforts to model the flow of these fluid-filled bodies. Motivated by the intricate coupling between hydrodynamics and the interactions of fluid-filled bodies, several methods have been developed. The objective of this review is to present a compact foundation of the methods used in the literature in the context of lattice Boltzmann methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Phys J E Soft Matter
February 2024
We determine the local charge dynamics of a [Formula: see text] electrolyte embedded in a varying-section channel. By means of an expansion based on the length scale separation between the axial and transverse direction of the channel, we derive closed formulas for the local excess charge for both, dielectric and conducting walls, in 2D (planar geometry) as well as in 3D (cylindrical geometry). Our results show that, even at equilibrium, the local charge electroneutrality is broken whenever the section of the channel is not homogeneous for both dielectric and conducting walls as well as for 2D and 3D channels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe study computationally the dynamics of forced, Brownian particles through a disordered system. As the concentration of mobile particles and/or fixed obstacles increase, we characterize the different regimes of flow and address how clogging develops. We show that clogging is preceded by a wide region of anomalous transport, characterized by a power law decay of intermittent bursts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlock copolymer melts offer unique templates to control the position and alignment of nanoparticles due to their ability to self-assemble into periodic ordered structures. Active particles are shown to coassemble with block copolymers leading to emergent organized structures. The block copolymer acts as a soft template that can control the self-propulsion of active particles, both for interface-segregated and selective nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe underlying mechanisms and physics of catalytic Janus microswimmers is highly complex, requiring details of the associated phoretic fields and the physiochemical properties of catalyst, particle, boundaries, and the fuel used. Therefore, developing a minimal (and more general) model capable of capturing the overall dynamics of these autonomous particles is highly desirable. In the presented work, we demonstrate that a coarse-grained dissipative particle-hydrodynamics model is capable of describing the behaviour of various chemical microswimmer systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExperiments performed using micro-patterned one dimensional collision assays have allowed a precise quantitative analysis of the collective manifestation of contact inhibition locomotion (CIL) wherein, individual migrating cells reorient their direction of motion when they come in contact with other cells. Inspired by these experiments, we present a discrete, minimal 1D Active spin model that mimics the CIL interaction between cells in one dimensional channels. We analyze the emergent collective behaviour of migrating cells in such confined geometries, as well as the sensitivity of the emergent patterns to driving forces that couple to cell motion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagnetic nanorods driven by rotating fields in water can be rapidly steered along any direction while generating strong and localized hydrodynamic flow fields. Here we show that, when raising the frequency of the rotating field, these nanopropellers undergo a dynamic transition from a rolling to a kayak-like motion due to the increase in viscous drag and acquire a finite inclination angle with respect to the plane perpendicular to the bottom surface. We explain these experimental observations with a theoretical model which considers the nanorod as a pair of ferromagnetic particles hydrodynamically interacting with a close stationary surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe derive a dynamical field theory for self-propelled particles subjected to generic torques and forces by explicitly coarse-graining their microscopic dynamics, described by a many-body Fokker-Planck equation. The model includes both intrinsic torques inducing self-rotation, as well as interparticle torques leading to, for instance, the local alignment of particles' orientations. Within this approach, although the functional form of the pairwise interactions does not need to be specified, one can directly map the parameters of the field theory onto the parameters of particle-based models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
November 2022
In active nematic liquid crystals, activity is able to drive chaotic spatiotemporal flows referred to as active turbulence. Active turbulence has been characterized through theoretical and experimental work as a low Reynolds number phenomenon. We show that, in two dimensions, the active forcing alone is able to trigger hydrodynamic turbulence leading to the coexistence of active and inertial turbulence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn viscous fluids, motile microentities such as bacteria or artificial swimmers often display different transport modes than macroscopic ones. A current challenge in the field aims at using friction asymmetry to steer the motion of microscopic particles. Here we show that lithographically shaped magnetic microtriangles undergo a series of complex transport modes when driven by a precessing magnetic field, including a surfing-like drift close to the bottom plane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSimilar to cells, bacteria, and other micro-organisms, synthetic chemically active colloids can harness the energy from their environment through a surface chemical reaction and use the energy to self-propel in fluidic environments. In this paper, we study the chemo-mechanical coupling that leads to the self-propulsion of chemically active colloids. The coupling between chemical reactions and momentum transport is a consequence of Onsager reciprocal relations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the nanoscale regime, flow behaviors for liquids show qualitative deviations from bulk expectations. In this work, we reveal by molecular dynamics simulations that plug flow down to nanoscale induces molecular friction that leads to a new flow structure due to the molecular clogging of the encaged liquid. This plug-like nanoscale liquid flow shows several features differ from the macroscopic plug flow and Poiseuille flow: It leads to enhanced liquid/solid friction, producing a friction of several order of magnitude larger than that of Couette flow; the friction enhancement is sensitively dependent of the liquid column length and the wettability of the solid substrates; it leads to the local compaction of liquid molecules that may induce solidification phenomenon for a long liquid column.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a hydrodynamic theory for systems of dipolar active Brownian particles which, in the regime of weak dipolar coupling, predicts the onset of motility-induced phase separation (MIPS), consistent with Brownian dynamics (BD) simulations. The hydrodynamic equations are derived by explicitly coarse-graining the microscopic Langevin dynamics, thus allowing for a mapping of the coarse-grained model and particle-resolved simulations. Performing BD simulations at fixed density, we find that dipolar interactions tend to hinder MIPS, as first reported in [Liao , , 2020, , 2208].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtificial active particles are autonomous agents able to convert energy from the environment into net propulsion, breaking detailed balance and the action-reaction law, clear signatures of their out-of-equilibrium nature. Here we investigate the emergence of directed motion in clusters composed of passive and catalytically active apolar colloids. We use a light-induced chemophoretic flow to rapidly assemble hybrid self-propelling clusters composed of hematite particles and passive silica spheres.
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