Collective Transport for Active Matter Run and Tumble Disk Systems on a Traveling Wave Substrate
Cs. S\'andor, A. Lib\'al, C. Reichhardt, and C.J. Olson Reichhardt

TL;DR
This study investigates how active run-and-tumble disks move on a traveling wave substrate, revealing phase transitions, clustering behaviors, and potential applications in active matter separation.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical analysis of active disk transport on a traveling wave substrate, highlighting phase transitions and clustering phenomena not previously characterized.
Findings
Sharp transition to phase separated cluster state
Cluster motion can oppose the traveling wave direction
System can be used for active matter species separation
Abstract
We numerically examine the transport of an assembly of active run-and-tumble disks interacting with a traveling wave substrate. We show that as a function of substrate strength, wave speed, disk activity, and disk density, a variety of dynamical phases arise that are correlated with the structure and net flux of disks. We find that there is a sharp transition into a state where the disks are only partially coupled to the substrate and form a phase separated cluster state. This transition is associated with a drop in the net disk flux and can occur as a function of the substrate speed, maximum substrate force, disk run time, and disk density. Since variation of the disk activity parameters produces different disk drift rates for a fixed traveling wave speed on the substrate, the system we consider could be used as an efficient method for active matter species separation. Within the…
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