Auto-phoretic nanorods driven up the wall by gravity
ORAL
Abstract
Gravitaxis is the directed upward motion of micro-organisms against gravity, and is observed for a few ciliated organisms like~\textit{Chlamydomonas},~\textit{Euglenas}~or~\textit{Paramecium}. Lacking a dedicated sensor, their gravitactic response relies on bottom-heaviness or shape anisotropy to induce a bias in their swimming direction. Here we study the gravitaxis of heavy self-electrophoretic Janus nanorods that move upwards on a steeply inclined substrate. Comparisons in experiments and simulations between homogeneous and bottom-heavy nanorods reveal two mechanisms contributing to the gravitactic response of the latter: a buoyancy torque and hydrodynamic interactions with the wall. We show that lubrication forces induce an effective fore-aft asymmetry on nanorods that reinforces the orientation bias to move up the steep wall against gravity.
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Authors
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Quentin Brosseau
New York University - Courant Institute
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Florencio Balboa Usabiaga
Flatiron Institute
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Enkeleida Lushi
Department of Mathematics, New Jersey Institute of Technology, New Jersey Institute of Technology
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Yang Wu
New York University
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Leif Ristroph
New York University - Courant Institute
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Mike Ward
New York University
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Mike Shelley
New York University - Courant Institute
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Jun Zhang
New York University - Courant Institute