| Literature DB >> 28466943 |
Megan S Davies Wykes1, Xiao Zhong2, Jiajun Tong1, Takuji Adachi2, Yanpeng Liu3, Leif Ristroph1, Michael D Ward2, Michael J Shelley4, Jun Zhang5.
Abstract
The swimming direction of biological or artificial microscale swimmers tends to be randomised over long time-scales by thermal fluctuations. Bacteria use various strategies to bias swimming behaviour and achieve directed motion against a flow, maintain alignment with gravity or travel up a chemical gradient. Herein, we explore a purely geometric means of biasing the motion of artificial nanorod swimmers. These artificial swimmers are bimetallic rods, powered by a chemical fuel, which swim on a substrate printed with teardrop-shaped posts. The artificial swimmers are hydrodynamically attracted to the posts, swimming alongside the post perimeter for long times before leaving. The rods experience a higher rate of departure from the higher curvature end of the teardrop shape, thereby introducing a bias into their motion. This bias increases with swimming speed and can be translated into a macroscopic directional motion over long times by using arrays of teardrop-shaped posts aligned along a single direction. This method provides a protocol for concentrating swimmers, sorting swimmers according to different speeds, and could enable artificial swimmers to transport cargo to desired locations.Year: 2017 PMID: 28466943 DOI: 10.1039/c7sm00203c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soft Matter ISSN: 1744-683X Impact factor: 3.679