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Self-propelled colloidal objects, such as motile bacteria or synthetic microswimmers, have microscopically irreversible individual dynamics - a feature they share with all living systems. The incoherent behaviour of individual swimmers can then be harnessed (or rectified) by microfluidic devices that create systematic motions impossible in equilibrium. Examples include flow of rotor particles round a circuit, steady rotation of a gear wheel in a bacterial bath, and pumping of bacteria between chambers by funnel gates. Here we present a computational proof-of-concept study, showing that such active rectification devices might be created directly from an unstructured primordial soup of motile particles, solely by using spatially modulated illumination to control their local propulsion speed. Alongside both microscopic irreversibility and speed modulation, our mechanism requires spatial symmetry breaking, such as a chevron light pattern, and strong interactions between particles, such as volume exclusion causing a collisional slow-down at high density. These four factors create a many-body rectification mechanism that generically differs from one-body microfluidic antecedents. Our work suggests that standard spatial-light-modulator technology might allow the programmable, light-induced self-assembly of active rectification devices from an unstructured particle bath.
We investigate the phase behavior and kinetics of a monodisperse mixture of active (textit{i.e.}, self-propelled) and passive isometric Brownian particles through Brownian dynamics simulations and theory. As in a purely active system, motility of the
Study on a rectified current induced by active particles has received a great attention due to its possible application to a microscopic motor in biological environments. Insertion of an {em asymmetric} passive object amid many active particles has b
We study DNA self-assembly and DNA computation using a coarse-grained DNA model within the directional dynamic bonding framework {[}C. Svaneborg, Comp. Phys. Comm. 183, 1793 (2012){]}. In our model, a single nucleotide or domain is represented by a s
Using computer simulations and dynamic mean-field theory, we demonstrate that fast enough rotation of circle active Brownian particles in two dimensions generates a dynamical clustering state interrupting the conventional motility induced phase separ
Controlling the topology of structures self-assembled from a set of heterogeneous building blocks is highly desirable for many applications, but is poorly understood theoretically. Here we show that the thermodynamic theory of self-assembly involves