The non-equilibrium thermodynamics of active suspensions
Pierre Gaspard

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive non-equilibrium thermodynamic framework for active suspensions of self-propelled colloidal particles, explicitly incorporating their orientation degrees of freedom and mechanochemical couplings.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed thermodynamic theory for active suspensions, including orientation dynamics, entropy production, and constitutive relations based on symmetry principles.
Findings
Derived explicit entropy production rate for active suspensions.
Established thermodynamic forces and fluxes for colloidal orientation and chemical reactions.
Determined mechanochemical coupling coefficients for Janus particles.
Abstract
Active suspensions composed of self-propelled colloidal particles are considered. Their propulsion of is generated by chemical reactions occurring by heterogeneous catalysis and diffusiophoresis coupling the concentration gradients of reacting molecular species to the fluid velocity. By this mechanism, chemical free energy is transduced into mechanical motion. The non-equilibrium thermodynamics of such active suspensions is developed by explicitly taking into account the internal degrees of freedom of active particles, which are the Eulerian angles specifying their orientation. Accordingly, the distribution function of colloidal particles is defined in the six-dimensional configuration space of their position and their orientation, which fully characterises polar, nematic, and higher orientational orders in the active system. The local Gibbs and Euler thermodynamic relations are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Micro and Nano Robotics
