Issue 31, 2024

Power-law intermittency in the gradient-induced self-propulsion of colloidal swimmers

Abstract

Active colloidal microswimmers serve as archetypical active fluid systems, and as models for biological swimmers. Here, by studying in detail their velocity traces, we find robust power-law intermittency with system-dependent exponential cut off. We model the intermittent motion by an interplay of the field gradient-dependent active force, which depends on a fluid gradient and is reduced when the swimmer moves, and the locally fluctuating hydrodynamic drag, that is set by the wetting properties of the substrate. The model closely describes the velocity distributions of two disparate swimmer systems: AC field activated and catalytic swimmers. The generality is highlighted by the collapse of all data in a single master curve, suggesting the applicability to further systems, both synthetic and biological.

Graphical abstract: Power-law intermittency in the gradient-induced self-propulsion of colloidal swimmers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
18 May 2024
Accepted
31 May 2024
First published
05 Jun 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 6103-6108

Power-law intermittency in the gradient-induced self-propulsion of colloidal swimmers

N. Oikonomeas-Koppasis, S. Ketzetzi, D. J. Kraft and P. Schall, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 6103 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00603H

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