Emergence of Life-Like Properties from Dissipative Self-Assembly of Nanoparticles

ORAL

Abstract

A profoundly fundamental question at the interface between physics and biology remains open: What are the minimum requirements for emergence of life-like properties from non-living systems? Here, we address this question and report emergent complex behavior of tens to thousands of colloidal nanoparticles in a system designed to be as plain as possible: The system is driven far from equilibrium by ultrafast laser pulses, which create spatiotemporal temperature gradients, inducing Marangoni-type flow that drags the particles towards aggregation; strong Brownian motion, used as source of fluctuations, opposes aggregation. Nonlinear feedback mechanisms naturally arise between the flow, the aggregate, and Brownian motion, allowing fast external control with minimal intervention. Consequently, complex behavior, analogous to those commonly seen in living organisms, emerges, whereby the aggregates can self-sustain, self-regulate, self-replicate, self-heal and can be transferred from one location to another, all within seconds. Aggregates can comprise of only one pattern or bifurcated patterns can co-exist, compete, survive or die.

Authors

  • Serim Ilday

    Bilkent University, Bilkent Univ

  • Ghaith Makey

    Bilkent University, Bilkent Univ

  • Gursoy B. Akguc

    Bilkent University

  • Ozgun Yavuz

    Bilkent University, Bilkent Univ

  • Onur Tokel

    Bilkent University

  • Ihor Pavlov

    Bilkent University, Bilkent Univ

  • Oguz Gulseren

    Bilkent Univ, Bilkent University, Department of Physics, Bilkent University, Bilkent, Ankara 06800, Turkey

  • Omer Ilday

    Bilkent University, Bilkent Univ, Department of Physics, Bilkent University, 06800 Ankara, Turkey