Issue 20, 2024

Microscopic origin of tunable assembly forces in chiral active environments

Abstract

Across a variety of spatial scales, from nanoscale biological systems to micron-scale colloidal systems, equilibrium self-assembly is entirely dictated by—and therefore limited by—the thermodynamic properties of the constituent materials. In contrast, nonequilibrium materials, such as self-propelled active matter, expand the possibilities for driving the assemblies that are inaccessible in equilibrium conditions. Recently, a number of works have suggested that active matter drives or accelerates self-organization, but the emergent interactions that arise between solutes immersed in actively driven environments are complex and poorly understood. Here, we analyze and resolve two crucial questions concerning actively driven self-assembly: (i) how, mechanistically, do active environments drive self-assembly of passive solutes? (ii) Under which conditions is this assembly robust? We employ the framework of odd hydrodynamics to theoretically explain numerical and experimental observations that chiral active matter, i.e., particles driven with a directional torque, produces robust and long-ranged assembly forces. Together, these developments constitute an important step towards a comprehensive theoretical framework for controlling self-assembly in nonequilibrium environments.

Graphical abstract: Microscopic origin of tunable assembly forces in chiral active environments

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Feb 2024
Accepted
26 Apr 2024
First published
10 May 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 4111-4126

Microscopic origin of tunable assembly forces in chiral active environments

C. H. Batton and G. M. Rotskoff, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 4111 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00247D

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