Spontaneous motion in hierarchically assembled active matter
Tim Sanchez, Daniel T. N. Chen, Stephen J. DeCamp, Michael Heymann,, and Zvonimir Dogic

TL;DR
This paper explores how hierarchically assembled active matter, inspired by cellular molecular motors, exhibits autonomous motion, chaotic flows, and self-healing properties, advancing biomimetic material design.
Contribution
It demonstrates the hierarchical assembly of active microtubule-based materials that show collective, autonomous, and self-organizing behaviors not present in passive systems.
Findings
Active microtubule networks generate chaotic flows and instabilities.
Confined active networks form self-healing, flowing nematic liquid crystals.
Active emulsions exhibit autonomous motility and dynamic defect behavior.
Abstract
With exquisite precision and reproducibility, cells orchestrate the cooperative action of thousands of nanometer-sized molecular motors to carry out mechanical tasks at much larger length scales, such as cell motility, division and replication. Besides their biological importance, such inherently non-equilibrium processes are an inspiration for developing biomimetic active materials from microscopic components that consume energy to generate continuous motion. Being actively driven, these materials are not constrained by the laws of equilibrium statistical mechanics and can thus exhibit highly sought-after properties such as autonomous motility, internally generated flows and self-organized beating. Starting from extensile microtubule bundles, we hierarchically assemble active analogs of conventional polymer gels, liquid crystals and emulsions. At high enough concentration, microtubules…
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