4.7 Article

Artificial chemotaxis of phoretic swimmers: instantaneous and long-time behaviour

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 856, Issue -, Pages 921-957

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2018.718

Keywords

colloids; propulsion

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [682754]
  2. Trinity College
  3. George and Lilian Schiff Studentship

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Phoretic swimmers are a class of artificial active particles that has received significant attention in recent years. By making use of self-generated gradients (e.g. in temperature, electric potential or some chemical product) phoretic swimmers are capable of self-propulsion without the complications of mobile body parts or a controlled external field. Focusing on diffusiophoresis, we quantify in this paper the mechanisms through which phoretic particles may achieve chemotaxis, both at the individual and the non-interacting population level. We first derive a fully analytical law for the instantaneous propulsion and orientation of a phoretic swimmer with general axisymmetric surface properties, in the limit of zero Peclet number and small Damkohler number. We then apply our results to the case of a Janus sphere, one of the most common designs of phoretic swimmers used in experimental studies. We next put forward a novel application of generalised Taylor dispersion theory in order to characterise the long-time behaviour of a population of non-interacting phoretic swimmers. We compare our theoretical results with numerical simulations for the mean drift and anisotropic diffusion of phoretic swimmers in chemical gradients. Our results will help inform the design of phoretic swimmers in future experimental applications.

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