Active Matter on Asymmetric Substrates
C.J. Olson Reichhardt, J. Drocco, T. Mai, M.B. Wan, and C. Reichhardt

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that active matter particles interacting with asymmetric substrates can exhibit a ratchet effect, leading to directed motion without external ac forcing, depending on their interaction rules and motion behavior.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a ratchet effect in active matter systems without ac forcing, highlighting the role of interaction rules and particle behavior in directed motion.
Findings
Directed motion depends on particle interaction rules.
Particles can accumulate along container walls.
Pattern formation occurs for synchronized particle motion.
Abstract
For collections of particles in a thermal bath interacting with an asymmetric substrate, it is possible for a ratchet effect to occur where the particles undergo a net dc motion in response to an ac forcing. Ratchet effects have been demonstrated in a variety of systems including colloids as well as magnetic vortices in type-II superconductors. Here we examine the case of active matter or self-driven particles interacting with asymmetric substrates. Active matter systems include self-motile colloidal particles undergoing catalysis, swimming bacteria, artificial swimmers, crawling cells, and motor proteins. We show that a ratchet effect can arise in this type of system even in the absence of ac forcing. The directed motion occurs for certain particle-substrate interaction rules and its magnitude depends on the amount of time the particles spend swimming in one direction before turning…
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