An in vitro living system for flow rectification
Zhi Dou, Liu Hong, Zhengwei Li, Fan Kiat Chan, Yashraj Bhosale, Onur, Aydin, Gabriel Juarez, M. Taher A. Saif, Leonardo P. Chamorro, Mattia, Gazzola

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a bio-hybrid system where engineered muscle tissue autonomously generates streaming flows at low frequencies, providing insights into biological flow rectification and potential applications in fluid mechanics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a living, in vitro system that produces endogenous streaming flows through muscle contractions, bridging biological and engineering fluid dynamics.
Findings
Flow patterns match streaming simulations.
Muscle contractions induce controllable flow patterns.
System operates autonomously at 2-4Hz.
Abstract
Small - but finite - fluid inertia can be leveraged to generate steady flows out of liquid vibrations around an immersed interface. In engineering, external high-frequency drivers (10-10 Hz) allow this inertial rectification phenomenon, known as viscous streaming, to be employed in micron-scale devices for precise flow control, particle manipulation and spatially controlled chemistry. However, beyond artificial settings, streaming may also be accessed by larger-scale biological systems pertaining to lower frequencies. Then, millimeter-size bacteria or larvae that oscillate cilia and appendages in the 1-10Hz range may be able to endogenously rectify surrounding flows, for feeding or locomotion, removing the need for external actuators, tethers or tubings. In support of this hypothesis, here we demonstrate an in vitro living system able to produce streaming flows, endogenously,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
