Interfacial aggregation of self-propelled Janus colloids in sessile droplets
Maziyar Jalaal, Borge ten Hagen, Hai le The, Christian Diddens, Detlef, Lohse, Alvaro Marin

TL;DR
This study investigates how self-propelled Janus colloids tend to accumulate at liquid/gas interfaces in droplets, revealing mechanisms that resemble biological microswimmer behavior despite flow conditions.
Contribution
It demonstrates the interfacial accumulation of Janus particles in droplets and disentangles the mechanisms behind this behavior through experiments and simulations.
Findings
Janus particles accumulate at the droplet interface despite Marangoni flows
Passive tracers do not show interfacial accumulation, indicating active motion influence
Simulations confirm the role of self-propulsion in interfacial localization
Abstract
Living microorganisms in confined systems typically experience an affinity to populate boundaries. The reason for such affinity to interfaces can be a combination of their directed motion and hydrodynamic interactions at distances larger than their own size. Here we will show that self-propelled Janus particles (polystyrene particles partially coated with platinum) immersed in droplets of water and hydrogen peroxide tend to accumulate in the vicinity of the liquid/gas interface. Interestingly, the interfacial accumulation occurs despite the presence of an evaporation-driven flow caused by a solutal Marangoni flow, which typically tends to redistribute the particles within the droplet's bulk. By performing additional experiments with passive colloids (flow tracers) and comparing with numerical simulations for both particle active motion and the fluid flow, we disentangle the dominating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
