4.7 Article

Turning catalytically active pores into active pumps

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 159, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0160414

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This study develops a semi-analytical model for self-diffusioosmotic transport in active pores. The authors investigate the spontaneous symmetry breaking in fore-aft symmetric pores and find that the pumping transition is controlled by three timescales. Introducing asymmetry to the pore reveals a second type of advection-enabled transition.
We develop a semi-analytical model of self-diffusioosmotic transport in active pores, which includes advective transport and the inverse chemical reaction that consumes solute. In previous work [Antunes et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 129, 188003 (2022)], we have demonstrated the existence of a spontaneous symmetry breaking in fore-aft symmetric pores that enables them to function as a micropump. We now show that this pumping transition is controlled by three timescales. Two timescales characterize advective and diffusive transport. The third timescale corresponds to how long a solute molecule resides in the pore before being consumed. Introducing asymmetry to the pore (either via the shape or the catalytic coating) reveals a second type of advection-enabled transition. In asymmetric pores, the flow rate exhibits discontinuous jumps and hysteresis loops upon tuning the parameters that control the asymmetry. This work demonstrates the interconnected roles of shape and catalytic patterning in the dynamics of active pores and shows how to design a pump for optimum performance.

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