Diversity of self-propulsion speeds reduces motility-induced clustering in confined active matter
Author
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Castro, Pablo de
Author
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Rocha, Francisco M.
Author
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Diles, Saulo
Author
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Soto Bertrán, Rodrigo Antonio
Author
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Sollich, Peter
Admission date
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2022-03-03T20:02:11Z
Available date
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2022-03-03T20:02:11Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Soft Matter Volume17 Issue43 Page 9926-9936 Nov 10, 2021
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1039/d1sm01009c
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/184014
Abstract
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Self-propelled swimmers such as bacteria agglomerate into clusters as a result of their persistent motion. In 1D, those clusters do not coalesce macroscopically and the stationary cluster size distribution (CSD) takes an exponential form. We develop a minimal lattice model for active particles in narrow channels to study how clustering is affected by the interplay between self-propulsion speed diversity and confinement. A mixture of run-and-tumble particles with a distribution of self-propulsion speeds is simulated in 1D. Particles can swap positions at rates proportional to their relative self-propulsion speed. Without swapping, we find that the average cluster size L-c decreases with diversity and follows a non-arithmetic power mean of the single-component L-c's, unlike the case of tumbling-rate diversity previously studied. Effectively, the mixture is thus equivalent to a system of identical particles whose self-propulsion speed is the harmonic mean self-propulsion speed of the mixture. With swapping, particles escape more quickly from clusters. As a consequence, L-c decreases with swapping rates and depends less strongly on diversity. We derive a dynamical equilibrium theory for the CSDs of binary and fully polydisperse systems. Similarly to the clustering behaviour of one-component models, our qualitative results for mixtures are expected to be universal across active matter. Using literature experimental values for the self-propulsion speed diversity of unicellular swimmers known as choanoflagellates, which naturally differentiate into slower and faster cells, we predict that the error in estimating their L(c)via one-component models which use the conventional arithmetic mean self-propulsion speed is around 30%.
es_ES
Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Royal Soc Chemistry
es_ES
Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States