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Preferred penetration of active nano-rods into narrow channels and their clustering. | LitMetric

Preferred penetration of active nano-rods into narrow channels and their clustering.

Phys Chem Chem Phys

Condensed Matter Science and Technology Institute, School of Instrumentation Science and Engineering, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150080, People's Republic of China.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Passive particles tend to stay in a reservoir rather than a channel due to entropic effects, but self-propelled rods can behave differently because of their ability to swim persistently.
  • The study uses dissipative particle dynamics to explore how active nano-rods distribute between a channel and a reservoir, finding that the partition ratio (Ψ) varies based on factors like active force, channel width, and rod length.
  • Unlike passive rods (Ψ < 1), active rods can overcome entropic barriers and prefer narrow channels (Ψ > 1), showing alignment and collective movement under certain conditions, with their cluster size distribution following a power law for small clusters.

Article Abstract

In a channel connected to a reservoir, passive particles prefer staying in the reservoir than the channel due to the entropic effect, as the size of the particles is comparable to that of the channel. Self-propelled rods can exhibit out-of-equilibrium phenomena, and their partition behavior may differ from that of passive rods due to their persistent swimming ability. In this work, the distribution of active nano-rods between the nanoscale channel and reservoir is explored using dissipative particle dynamics. The ratio of the nano-rod concentration in the slit to that in the reservoir, defined as the partition ratio Ψ, is a function of active force, channel width, and rod length. Although passive nano-rods prefer staying in bulk (Ψ < 1), active rods can overcome the entropic barrier and show favorable partition toward narrow channels (Ψ > 1). As the slit width decreases to about the rod's width, active rods entering the slit behave like a quasi-two-dimensional system dynamically. At sufficiently high concentrations and Peclet numbers, nano-rods tend to align and move together in the same direction for a certain time. The distribution (PM) of the cluster size (M) follows a power law, PM ∝ M-2, for small clusters.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cp01065dDOI Listing

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