Research

Confinement leads to spatially oscillatory collective motion of chiral active matter

来源: 作者: 发布时间:2022-05-26

Active matter consisting of self-propelling agents, e.g., bacterial solutions and self-driven colloids, is an important class of soft matter systems. Due to its inherent out-of-equilibrium nature, active matter often exhibits exotic behaviors and has potential applications in microdevices and smart materials. Currently, exploration of chiral active matter composed of self-spinning objects, breaking both parity and time-reversal symmetries, is an exciting and a rapidly developing area. A particularly intriguing phenomenon of chiral active matter is the emergence of a spontaneous unidirectional collective edge flow when in confinement. The edge flow is proven to be even topologically protected, with potentials for robust material transport. This unique feature has generally been discussed in the context of incompressible structureless and homogeneous fluid. Extensive studies have revealed that the spinner-boundary interactions play an essential role in the emergence of the edge flow. However, besides the steric interactions, confinement can also cause a spatially nonuniform density distribution due to particle-position correlations. The density inhomogeneity is ubiquitous in confined interacting many-body systems and its effect on the collective behavior remains elusive.

In a new study, entitled “Oscillating collective motion of active rotors in confinement”, published on PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA on May 19, Prof. ZHENG Ning’s group from Beijing Institute of Technology, collaborating with a research group led by Prof. YANG Mingcheng and Prof. YE Fangfu from the Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, has made great progress in understanding the collective motion of confined chiral active matter (Fig.1).

By combining theoretical calculation, numerical simulation, and experimental observation, the researchers investigate the effects of the density inhomogeneity on the emergent collective behavior in confined active spinners. They find a striking spatially oscillating collective motion of the chiral active matter along the confinement boundary (Fig.2). Microscopically, this oscillatory collective motion is generated by a position-dependent frictional stress originating from the nonuniform distribution of spinners. The researchers further show that the collective behavior experiences three different modes: viscous, viscoelastic, and elastic, as the system density varies. The structural origins of the transitions between the different modes are well identified by the percolation of solid-like regions or the occurrence of defect-induced particle rearrangement (Fig.3).

These findings significantly advance our understanding of collective motion of chiral active matter in confinement, and highlight the importance of compressibility and inhomogeneity in the emergent collective behavior of active systems.

This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences of Chinese Academy of Sciences, and the K. C. Wong Education Foundation.

Fig. 1 Schematic diagram of simulation and experiment systems.

Fig. 2 Different collective motion modes from simulation and experiment.

Fig. 3 Structure origins of different motion modes identified by local crystalline order, probabilities of percolation, and mean numbers of defects.

Contact:

School of Physics, Beijing Institute of Technology

ZHENG Ning

Email: ningzheng@bit.edu.cn

Key word:

chiral active matter; spinner; confinement; oscillatory collective edge flow;

Abstract:

Emergent collective behavior of chiral active matter in confinement is investigated through theory, simulation and experiment. The confinement-induced density inhomogeneity of active particles gives rise to a striking spatially oscillatory edge flow, possessing three different collective modes.