AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores active Brownian grains as open systems that exchange energy and matter with their environment, showing behaviors similar to ordinary phase transitions.
  • It focuses on the motion of light-absorbing, strongly interacting grains suspended in a gas discharge under laser irradiation, where active motion results from photophoresis.
  • The research includes experimental observations of charged grains transitioning from solid to liquid states, analyzing their motion characteristics like mean-square and linear displacement under different structural randomization.

Article Abstract

The systems of active Brownian grains can be considered as open systems, in which there is an exchange of energy and matter with the environment. The collective phenomena of active Brownian grains can demonstrate analogies with ordinary phase transitions. We study the active Brownian motion of light-absorbing and strongly interacting grains far from equilibrium suspended in gas discharge under laser irradiation when the nature and intensity of the active motion depend on the effect of radiation. Active Brownian motion is caused by photophoresis, i.e., absorption of laser radiation at the metal-coated surface of the grain creates radiometric force, which in turn drives the grains. We experimentally observed the active Brownian motion of charged grains in the transition of the grain monolayer from the solid to liquid state. An analysis of the character of motion, including the mean-square and linear displacement and persistence length at various values of the randomization (coupling parameter) of the grain structure, was presented.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9124211PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-12354-7DOI Listing

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