Many natural and industrial processes rely on constrained transport, such as proteins moving through cells, particles confined in nanocomposite materials or gels, individuals in highly dense collectives and vehicular traffic conditions. These are examples of motion through crowded environments, in which the host matrix may retain some glass-like dynamics. Here we investigate constrained transport in a colloidal model system, in which dilute small spheres move in a slowly rearranging, glassy matrix of large spheres. Using confocal differential dynamic microscopy and simulations, here we discover a critical size asymmetry, at which anomalous collective transport of the small particles appears, manifested as a logarithmic decay of the density autocorrelation functions. We demonstrate that the matrix mobility is central for the observed anomalous behaviour. These results, crucially depending on size-induced dynamic asymmetry, are of relevance for a wide range of phenomena ranging from glassy systems to cell biology. The classical Lorentz gas model is widely used to describe constrained transport, but its assumption of an immobile environment is not applicable to many biological and industrial processes. Here, the authors show that the mobility of the matrix induces anomalous, logarithmic dynamics of the confined particles.
Anomalous dynamics of intruders in a crowded environment of mobile obstacles
T. Sentjabrskaja,E. Zaccarelli,C. De Michele,F. Sciortino,P. Tartaglia,T. Voigtmann,S. Egelhaaf,M. Laurati
Published 2016 in Nature Communications
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- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Nature Communications
- Publication date
2016-04-04
- Fields of study
Medicine, Materials Science, Physics
- Identifiers
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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