Pattern formation in chemically interacting active rotors with self-propulsion

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Abstract

We demonstrate that active rotations in chemically signalling particles, such as autochemotactic E. coli close to walls, create a route for pattern formation based on a nonlinear yet deterministic instability mechanism. For slow rotations, we find a transient persistence of the uniform state, followed by a sudden formation of clusters contingent on locking of the average propulsion direction by chemotaxis. These clusters coarsen, which results in phase separation into a dense and a dilute region. Faster rotations arrest phase separation leading to a global travelling wave of rotors with synchronized roto-translational motion. Our results elucidate the physics resulting from the competition of two generic paradigms in active matter, chemotaxis and active rotations, and show that the latter provides a tool to design programmable self-assembly of active matter, for example to control coarsening.

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Liebchen, B., Cates, M. E., & Marenduzzo, D. (2016). Pattern formation in chemically interacting active rotors with self-propulsion. Soft Matter, 12(35), 7259–7264. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sm01162d

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