A Micrometer-sized Heat Engine Operating Between Bacterial Reservoirs
Sudeesh Krishnamurthy, Subho Ghosh, Dipankar Chatterji, Rajesh, Ganapathy, and A. K. Sood

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a micrometer-sized active Stirling engine powered by bacterial baths, revealing non-Gaussian fluctuations and efficiencies surpassing equilibrium limits, challenging traditional thermodynamic frameworks for non-equilibrium reservoirs.
Contribution
First experimental realization of an active micro heat engine operating between bacterial reservoirs, showing enhanced efficiency and non-Gaussian fluctuation effects beyond equilibrium thermodynamics.
Findings
Engine efficiency exceeds equilibrium Stirling limits at high activity.
Displacement statistics become increasingly non-Gaussian with activity.
Large non-Gaussian displacements contribute significantly to power output.
Abstract
Artificial micro heat engines are prototypical models to explore and elucidate the mechanisms of energy transduction in a regime that is dominated by fluctuations [1-2]. Micro heat engines realized hitherto mimicked their macroscopic counterparts and operated between reservoirs that were effectively thermal [3-7]. For such reservoirs, temperature is a well-defined state variable and stochastic thermodynamics provides a precise framework for quantifying engine performance [8-9]. It remains unclear whether these concepts readily carry over to situations where the reservoirs are out-of-equilibrium [10], a scenario of particular importance to the functioning of synthetic [11-12] and biological [13] micro engines and motors. Here we experimentally realized a micrometer-sized active Stirling engine by periodically cycling a colloidal particle in a time-varying harmonic optical potential…
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