| Literature DB >> 33432205 |
Changjin Wu1, Jia Dai1, Xiaofeng Li1, Liang Gao2, Jizhuang Wang1, Jun Liu1, Jing Zheng1, Xiaojun Zhan1, Jiawei Chen1, Xiang Cheng1, Mingcheng Yang3,4, Jinyao Tang5,6.
Abstract
Active matters are out-of-equilibrium systems that convert energy from the environment to mechanical motion. Non-reciprocal interaction between active matters may lead to collective intelligence beyond the capability of individuals. In nature, such emergent behaviours are ubiquitously observed in animal colonies, giving these species remarkable adaptive capability. In artificial systems, however, the emergence of non-trivial collective intelligent dynamics remains undiscovered. Here we show that a simple ion-exchange reaction can couple self-propelled ZnO nanorods and sulfonated polystyrene microbeads together. Chemical communication is established that enhances the reactivity and motion of both nanorods and the microbeads, resulting in the formation of an active swarm of nanorod-microbead complexes. We demonstrate that the swarm is capable of macroscopic phase segregation and intelligent consensus decision-making.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33432205 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-020-00825-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213