活性物质
物理
集体运动
集体行为
振荡(细胞信号)
粒子(生态学)
经典力学
凝聚态物理
化学
人类学
生物
细胞生物学
地质学
社会学
海洋学
生物化学
作者
Peng Liu,Hongwei Zhu,Yifan Zeng,Guangle Du,Luhui Ning,Dunyou Wang,Ke Chen,Ying Lü,Ning Zheng,Fangfu Ye,Mingcheng Yang
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1922633117
摘要
Due to its inherent out-of-equilibrium nature, active matter in confinement may exhibit collective behavior absent in unconfined systems. Extensive studies have indicated that hydrodynamic or steric interactions between active particles and boundary play an important role in the emergence of collective behavior. However, besides introducing external couplings at the single-particle level, the confinement also induces an inhomogeneous density distribution due to particle-position correlations, whose effect on collective behavior remains unclear. Here, we investigate this effect in a minimal chiral active matter composed of self-spinning rotors through simulation, experiment, and theory. We find that the density inhomogeneity leads to a position-dependent frictional stress that results from interrotor friction and couples the spin to the translation of the particles, which can then drive a striking spatially oscillating collective motion of the chiral active matter along the confinement boundary. Moreover, depending on the oscillation properties, the collective behavior has three different modes as the packing fraction varies. The structural origins of the transitions between the different modes are well identified by the percolation of solid-like regions or the occurrence of defect-induced particle rearrangement. Our results thus show that the confinement-induced inhomogeneity, dynamic structure, and compressibility have significant influences on collective behavior of active matter and should be properly taken into account.
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