Dynamic optical rectification and delivery of active particles

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Abstract

We use moving light patterns to control the motion of Escherichia coli bacteria whose motility is photo-activated. Varying the pattern speed controls the magnitude and direction of the bacterial flux, and therefore the accumulation of cells in up- and down-stream reservoirs. We validate our results with two-dimensional simulations and a 1-dimensional analytic model, and use these to explore parameter space. We find that cell accumulation is controlled by a competition between directed flux and undirected, stochastic transport. Our results point to a number of design principles for using moving light patterns and light-activated micro-swimmers in a range of practical applications.

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Koumakis, N., Brown, A. T., Arlt, J., Griffiths, S. E., Martinez, V. A., & Poon, W. C. K. (2019). Dynamic optical rectification and delivery of active particles. Soft Matter, 15(35), 7026–7032. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9sm00799g

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