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Mesoscale Active Matter in Fluids

Living matter, such as biological tissue, can be viewed as a nonequilibrium hierarchical assembly, where at each scale self-driven components come together by consuming energy in order to form increasingly complex structures. The remarkable properties of living or ‘‘active-matter’’ systems, as they are generally known, such as versatility, self-healing, and self-replicating, have prompted the following questions: (1) do we understand the biology and biophysics that give rise to these properties? (2) can we achieve similar functionality with synthetic active materials? We are particularly interested in active matter systems in fluids with finite inertia. Finite inertia is relevant for mesoscale organisms that swim or fly covering at least three orders of magnitude in size (~0.5 mm–50 cm) and their collective behavior is generally unknown. As a result, we are limited both in our understanding of the biology of mesoscale swarms and processes but also in our design of self-powered machines and robots at those scales. We expect interesting collective behavior to emerge because with finite inertia, come nonlinearities and the many-body hydrodynamic interactions between the organisms/particles can become quite complex, potentially leading to phenomena, such as novel flocking states and nonequilibrium phase transitions that have not been observed before and which could have great impact in materials applications.

  • Publications: 

  1. As Above, So Below, and also in Between: Mesoscale active matter in fluids. D. Klotsa. Soft Matter (invited perspective) 15, 8946 (2019). 

  2. Transition in motility mechanism due to inertia in a model self-propelled two-sphere swimmer. T. Dombrowski et al., Phys. Rev. Fluids (Rapid Comms) 4, 021101(R) (2019). 

  3. Propulsion of a Two-Sphere Swimmer. D. Klotsa et al., PRL 115, 248102 (2015).

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