Synthetic Chemotaxis and Collective Behavior in Active Matter
Benno Liebchen, Hartmut L\"owen

TL;DR
This paper explores how synthetic microswimmers mimic biological chemotaxis, focusing on repulsive chemical interactions that lead to diverse pattern formations, offering new insights into active matter collective behavior.
Contribution
It introduces the role of repulsive chemical interactions in pattern formation of synthetic microswimmers, expanding understanding beyond attractive interactions and classical clustering.
Findings
Repulsive chemical interactions can induce various patterns in active matter.
Synthetic signaling influences collective behavior and pattern formation.
Dynamic clustering can occur with repulsive interactions, not just attraction.
Abstract
Conspectus: The ability to navigate in chemical gradients, called chemotaxis, is crucial for the survival of microorganisms. It allows them to find food and to escape from toxins. Many microorganisms can produce the chemicals to which they respond themselves and use chemotaxis for signalling which can be seen as a basic form of communication. Remarkably, the past decade has let to the development of synthetic microswimmers like e.g. autophoretic Janus colloids, which can self-propel through a solvent, analogously to bacteria and other microorganims. The mechanism underlying their self-propulsion involves the production of certain chemicals. The same chemicals involved in the self-propulsion mechanism also act on other microswimmers and bias their swimming direction towards (or away from) the producing microswimmer. Synthetic microswimmers therefore provide a synthetic analogue to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks
