Issue 39, 2014

Spontaneous motility of passive emulsion droplets in polar active gels

Abstract

We study by computer simulations the dynamics of a droplet of passive, isotropic fluid, embedded in a polar active gel. The latter represents a fluid of active force dipoles, which exert either contractile or extensile stresses on their surroundings, modelling for instance a suspension of cytoskeletal filaments and molecular motors. When the polarisation of the active gel is anchored normal to the droplet at its surface, the nematic elasticity of the active gel drives the formation of a hedgehog defect; this defect then drives an active flow which propels the droplet forward. In an extensile gel, motility can occur even with tangential anchoring, which is compatible with a defect-free polarisation pattern. In this case, upon increasing activity the droplet first rotates uniformly, and then undergoes a discontinuous nonequilibrium transition into a translationally motile state, powered by bending deformations in the surrounding active medium.

Graphical abstract: Spontaneous motility of passive emulsion droplets in polar active gels

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Apr 2014
Accepted
28 Jul 2014
First published
28 Jul 2014

Soft Matter, 2014,10, 7826-7837

Author version available

Spontaneous motility of passive emulsion droplets in polar active gels

G. De Magistris, A. Tiribocchi, C. A. Whitfield, R. J. Hawkins, M. E. Cates and D. Marenduzzo, Soft Matter, 2014, 10, 7826 DOI: 10.1039/C4SM00937A

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