Chemical logic gates on active colloids
Jiang-Xing Chen, Jia-Qi Hu, Raymond Kapral

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how enzymatic chemical networks on active colloids can be used to create chemical logic gates, enabling autonomous sensing and task execution in synthetic active systems.
Contribution
It introduces a method to construct chemical logic gates on active colloids using enzymatic reactions, advancing autonomous computation in synthetic motors.
Findings
Chemical logic gates can be built using enzymatic reactions on colloids.
Colloids with chemical gates can perform simple sensing tasks.
Theoretical and simulation analyses support gate functionality.
Abstract
Synthetic active colloidal systems are being studied extensively because of the diverse and often unusual phenomena these nonequilibrium systems manifest, and their potential applications in fields ranging from biology to material science. Recent studies have shown that active colloidal motors that use enzymatic reactions for propulsion hold special promise for applications that require motors to carry out active sensing tasks in complicated biomedical environments. In such applications it would be desirable to have active colloids with some capability of computation so that they could act autonomously to sense their surroundings and alter their own dynamics to perform specific tasks. Here we describe how small chemical networks that make use of enzymatic chemical reactions on the colloid surface can be used to construct motor-based chemical logic gates. Some basic features of coupled…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
