Effect of anisotropy on the formation of active particle films
T. C. Rebocho, M. Tasinkevych, and C. S. Dias

TL;DR
This study investigates how particle anisotropy influences the structure and dynamics of active particle films near surfaces, revealing non-monotonic behaviors and stability differences through simulations of ellipsoidal and rod-like particles.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation analysis of anisotropic active particles near surfaces, highlighting the impact of particle shape on aggregate structure and stability.
Findings
Cluster structure varies non-monotonically with aspect ratio.
Hedgehog-like aggregates are more stable than rod-like ones.
Stabilization time shows a minimum at intermediate aspect ratios.
Abstract
Active colloids belong to a class of non-equilibrium systems where energy uptake, conversion and dissipation occurs at the level of individual colloidal particles, which can lead to particles self-propelled motion and surprising collective behavior. Examples include coexistence of vapor and liquid-like steady states for active particles with repulsive interactions only, phenomena known as motility induced phase transition. Similarly to motile unicellular organisms, active colloids tend to accumulate at confining surfaces forming dense adsorbed films. In this work, we study the structure and dynamics of aggregates of self-propelled particle near confining solid surfaces, focusing on the effects of the particle anisotropic interactions. We performed Langevin dynamics simulations of two complementary models for active particles: ellipsoidal particles interacting through Gay-Berne…
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