Interfacial Stability in Tensionless Phase-Separated Quorum-Sensing Systems
Zihao Sun, Longfei Li, Fangfu Ye, Mingcheng Yang

TL;DR
This paper investigates the interfacial behavior of phase-separated active particles communicating via quorum sensing, revealing a unique tensionless interface maintained by polarization forces and surface stiffness, distinct from traditional mechanical tension.
Contribution
It introduces a novel understanding of active interfaces with quorum sensing, showing vanishing mechanical tension but nonzero capillary tension, supported by theory and simulations.
Findings
Quorum-sensing active systems have zero mechanical surface tension.
The interface is stabilized by polarization forces and surface stiffness.
Distinct roles of mechanical and capillary tensions in active matter.
Abstract
Interfacial phenomena of motility-induced phase separation of active particles challenge our conventional understanding of phase coexistence. Despite the ubiquity of nonmechanical communication couplings among real active particles, most works on active interface have concentrated on active Brownian systems with steric interparticle interactions. Here, we study the interfacial behavior of phase-separated active particles interacting solely via quorum-sensing communications using both theory and simulations. Strikingly, we find that the quorum-sensing active system exhibits vanishing mechanical surface tension but nonzero effective capillary surface tension. We further demonstrate that the mechanical equilibrium of the tensionless interface is sustained by polarization force at the interface; while its dynamics is governed by the surface stiffness, which arises from tangential particle…
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