4.3 Article

Self-propulsion in 2D confinement: phoretic and hydrodynamic interactions

Journal

EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL E
Volume 44, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1140/epje/s10189-021-00101-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Indian Ministry of Human Resource Development
  2. Alexander von Humboldt foundation
  3. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [714027]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [714027] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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This study examines the motion of chemically active Janus particles in weak confinement, investigating the effects of confining planar boundaries on phoretic and hydrodynamic interactions. New states such as channel-spanning oscillations and damped oscillations around the centerline were identified, expanding on previous analyses of single wall interactions. Insights also suggest that biological and artificial swimmers sense their surroundings through long-ranged interactions that can be altered by changing surface properties.
Chemically active Janus particles generate tangential concentration gradients along their surface for self-propulsion. Although this is well studied in unbounded domains, the analysis in biologically relevant environments such as confinement is scarce. In this work, we study the motion of a Janus sphere in weak confinement. The particle is placed at an arbitrary location, with arbitrary orientation between the two walls. Using the method of reflections, we study the effect of confining planar boundaries on the phoretic and hydrodynamic interactions, and their consequence on the Janus particle dynamics. The dynamical trajectories are analyzed using phase diagrams for different surface coverage of activity and solute-particle interactions. In addition to near wall states such as 'sliding' and 'hovering', we demonstrate that accounting for two planar boundaries reveals two new states: channel-spanning oscillations and damped oscillations around the centerline, which were characterized as 'scattering' or 'reflection' by earlier analyses on single wall interactions. Using phase-diagrams, we highlight the differences in inert-facing and active-facing Janus particles. We also compare the dynamics of Janus particles with squirmers for contrasting the chemical interactions with hydrodynamic effects. Insights from the current work suggest that biological and artificial swimmers sense their surroundings through long-ranged interactions, that can be modified by altering the surface properties. Graphic abstract

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