A Marangoni swimmer pushing a particle raft under 1D confinement

Abstract

Active matter systems, due to their spontaneous self-propulsion ability, hold potential for future applications in healthcare and environmental sustainability. Marangoni swimmers, a type of synthetic active matter, are a common model system for understanding the underlying physics. Existing studies of the interactions of active matter with passive particles have mostly focused on the modification of the behavior of the passive particles. In contrast, we analyse here experimentally the impact on the self-propulsion of camphor-infused agarose disks (active) of their interactions with floating hollow glass microspheres (passive) within an annular channel. Two distinct regimes are observed: a steady regime with unidirectional motion of the swimmer at low packing fractions (ϕini ≲ 0.45) and an oscillatory regime with to-and-fro motion at higher packing fractions (ϕini ≳ 0.45). In the former, the swimmer pushes nearly the entire particle raft together with it, like towing a cargo, causing a decrease in swimmer speed with increasing packing fraction due to the additional drag from the particle raft. A simplified force-balance model is finally proposed that captures the experimental trend in swimmer speed reasonably well.

Graphical abstract: A Marangoni swimmer pushing a particle raft under 1D confinement

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Aug 2025
Accepted
19 Oct 2025
First published
20 Oct 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2025, Advance Article

A Marangoni swimmer pushing a particle raft under 1D confinement

A. Maitra, A. Pandey, S. Michelin and S. Jung, Soft Matter, 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5SM00836K

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