To explore and react to their environment, living micro-swimmers have developed sophisticated strategies for locomotion - in particular, motility with multiple gaits. To understand the physical principles associated with such a behavioural variability,synthetic model systems capable of mimicking it are needed. Here, we demonstrate bimodal gait switching in autophoretic droplet swimmers. This minimal experimental system is isotropic at rest, a symmetry that can be spontaneously broken due to the nonlinear coupling between hydrodynamic and chemical fields, inducing a variety of flow patterns that lead to different propulsive modes. We report a dynamical transition from quasi-ballistic to bimodal chaotic motion, controlled by the viscosity of the swimming medium. By simultaneous visualisation of the chemical and hydrodynamic fields, supported quantitatively by an advection-diffusion model, we show that higher hydrodynamic modes become excitable with increasing viscosity, while the recurrent mode-switching is driven by the droplet's interaction with self-generated chemical gradients. We further demonstrate that this gradient interaction results in anomalous diffusive swimming akin to self-avoiding spatial exploration strategies observed in nature.
Emergence of Bimodal Motility in Active Droplets
B. V. Hokmabad,R. Dey,M. Jalaal,Devaditya Mohanty,Madina Almukambetova,K. A. Baldwin,D. Lohse,C. Maass
Published 2020 in Physical Review X
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- Publication year
2020
- Venue
Physical Review X
- Publication date
2020-05-26
- Fields of study
Physics, Chemistry
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