Non-equilibrium thermodynamics in driven macroscopic self-assembly
Stuart J. Thomson, Jack-William Barotta, Daniel M. Harris

TL;DR
This study introduces a macroscopic driven self-assembly system to experimentally measure entropy production and non-equilibrium dynamics, bridging theoretical models with observable phenomena in non-reversible systems.
Contribution
It demonstrates direct measurement of entropy production in a macroscopic non-equilibrium system and validates a stochastic model linking to active matter physics.
Findings
Measured non-zero entropy production rate indicating broken detailed balance
Experimental dynamics agree with an active Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model
System exhibits structural rearrangements driven by external fields
Abstract
Equilibrium statistical mechanics provides a robust framework for characterizing phase transitions in systems whose microsopic dynamics are time-reversible. Efforts to develop and validate theoretical frameworks for time-irreversible, non-equilibrium systems are constrained by experimental data that capture only partial measurements of the system dynamics. We herein overcome this limitation using a tunable macroscopic platform for non-equilibrium physics: millimetric spheres bound by capillary attractions at the fluid interface and driven out of equilibrium by a field of supercritical Faraday waves. The external driving induces correlated fluctuations in the particle trajectories, which in turn excite structural rearrangements between distinct metastable cluster topologies. By tracking all microstate transitions experimentally, we directly measure a non-zero entropy production rate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Nonlinear Dynamics and Pattern Formation · Micro and Nano Robotics
