Clustering of chemically propelled nanomotors in chemically active environments.

Chaos

Chemical Physics Theory Group, Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3H6, Canada.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Synthetic nanomotors powered by chemical reactions can transport cargo and deliver drugs, and they can form swarms for various applications.
  • When these motors interact with a chemical network instead of an inactive fluid, their collective behavior changes significantly due to spatial patterns in the environment.
  • The study of motor dynamics reveals that interactions with chemical patterns can create unique movement patterns, with potential applications in complex biological and chemical environments.

Article Abstract

Synthetic nanomotors powered by chemical reactions have been designed to act as vehicles for active cargo transport, drug delivery, and a variety of other uses. Collections of such motors, acting in consort, can self-assemble to form swarms or clusters, providing opportunities for applications on various length scales. While such collective behavior has been studied when the motors move in a chemically inactive fluid environment, when the medium in which they move is a chemical network that supports complex spatial and temporal patterns, through simulation and theoretical analysis we show that collective behavior changes. Spatial patterns in the environment can guide and control motor collective states, and interactions of the motors with their environment can give rise to distinctive spatiotemporal motor patterns. The results are illustrated by studies of the motor dynamics in systems that support Turing patterns and spiral waves. This work is relevant for potential applications that involve many active nanomotors moving in complex chemical or biological environments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0188624DOI Listing

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