Issue 30, 2020

Dynamics and clogging of colloidal monolayers magnetically driven through a heterogeneous landscape

Abstract

We combine experiments and numerical simulations to investigate the emergence of clogging in a system of interacting paramagnetic colloidal particles driven against a disordered landscape of larger obstacles. We consider a single aperture in a landscape of immobile silica particles which are irreversibly attached to the substrate. We use an external rotating magnetic field to generate a traveling wave potential which drives the magnetic particles against these obstacles at a constant and frequency tunable speed. Experimentally we find that the particles display an intermittent dynamics with power law distributions at high frequencies. We reproduce these results by using numerical simulations and show that clogging in our system arises at large frequency, when the particles desynchronize with the moving landscape. Further, we use the model to explore the hidden role of flexibility in the obstacle displacements and the effect of hydrodynamic interactions between the particles. We also consider numerically the situation of a straight wall and investigate the range of parameters where clogging emerges in such case. Our work provides a soft matter test-bed system to investigate the effect of clogging in driven microscale matter.

Graphical abstract: Dynamics and clogging of colloidal monolayers magnetically driven through a heterogeneous landscape

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 May 2020
Accepted
03 Jul 2020
First published
06 Jul 2020

Soft Matter, 2020,16, 6985-6992

Dynamics and clogging of colloidal monolayers magnetically driven through a heterogeneous landscape

S. G. Leyva, R. L. Stoop, P. Tierno and I. Pagonabarraga, Soft Matter, 2020, 16, 6985 DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00904K

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