Active colloid with externally induced periodic bipolar motility and its cooperative motion
Airi N. Kato, Kazumasa A. Takeuchi, Masaki Sano

TL;DR
This study introduces externally controlled bipolar active particles using Quincke rollers under AC electric fields, revealing stable reciprocating motion, active Brownian motion, and self-organized clustering, advancing active matter research.
Contribution
It demonstrates a new method to induce and control bipolar motility in particles via external AC electric fields, expanding the understanding of active matter behaviors.
Findings
Observed stable reciprocating motion at external frequency.
Identified active Brownian particle-like persistent motion.
Documented self-organized clustering and cooperative motion.
Abstract
Active matter physics has been developed with various types of self-propelled particles, including those with polar and bipolar motility and beyond. However, the bipolar motions experimentally realized so far have been either random along the axis or periodic at intrinsic frequencies. Here we report another kind of bipolar active particles, whose periodic bipolar self-propulsion is set externally at a controllable frequency. We used Quincke rollers -- dielectric particles suspended in a conducting liquid driven by an electric field -- under an AC electric field instead of the usually used DC field. Reciprocating motion of a single particle at the external frequency was observed experimentally and characterized theoretically as stable periodic motion. Experimentally, we observed not only the reciprocating motion but also non-trivial active Brownian particle (ABP)-like persistent motion…
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