Extraction of the propulsive speed of catalytic nano- and micro-motors under different motion dynamics
Rafael Mestre, Lucas S. Palacios, Albert Miguel-L\'opez, Xavier, Arqu\'e, Ignacio Pagonabarraga, Samuel S\'anchez

TL;DR
This paper reviews methods for analyzing the speed of catalytic nano- and micro-motors, identifies errors in current techniques, and proposes revised formulas and approaches to improve accuracy in diverse motion scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces a revised formula for propulsive speed analysis, highlights the importance of recognizing different motion dynamics, and offers analytical methods to enhance measurement accuracy.
Findings
Revised formula improves speed estimation accuracy.
Errors identified in standard MSD-based speed calculations.
Different motion dynamics significantly affect propulsion analysis.
Abstract
Motion of active particles, such as catalytic micro- and nano-motors, is usually characterized via either dynamic light scattering or optical microscopy. In both cases, speed of particles is obtained from the calculus of the mean square displacement (MSD) and typically, the theoretical formula of the MSD is derived from the motion equations of an active Brownian particle. One of the most commonly reported parameters is the speed of the particle, usually attributed to its propulsion, and is widely used to compare the motion efficiency of catalytic motors. However, it is common to find different methods to compute this parameter, which are not equivalent approximations and do not possess the same physical meaning. Here, we review the standard methods of speed analysis and focus on the errors that arise when analyzing the MSD of self-propelled particles. We analyze the errors from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Diffusion and Search Dynamics
