Using Shape Diversity on the way to new Structure-Function Designs for Magnetic Micropropellers
Felix Bachmann Klaas Bente, Agnese Codutti, Damien Faivre

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that shape diversity in magnetic micropropellers enhances control over their motion, enabling frequency-controlled directional reversal and sorting, thus advancing microswimmer design for complex applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach where shape complexity in micropropellers improves controllability and enables frequency-based directional control without external actuation complexity.
Findings
Shape diversity enables directional reversal controlled by frequency.
Complex shapes allow simple sorting of micropropellers.
Frequency control increases maneuverability of microswimmers.
Abstract
Synthetic microswimmers mimicking biological movements at the microscale have been developed in recent years. Actuating helical magnetic materials with a homogeneous rotating magnetic field is one of the most widespread techniques for propulsion at the microscale, partly because the actuation strategy revolves around a simple linear relationship between the actuating field frequency and the propeller velocity. However, the full control of the swimmers' motion has remained a challenge. Increasing the controllability of micropropellers is crucial to achieve complex actuation schemes that in turn are directly relevant for numerous applications. The simplicity of the linear relationship though limits the possibilities and flexibilities of swarm control. Using a pool of randomly-shaped magnetic microswimmers, we show that the complexity of shape can advantageously be translated into enhanced…
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