Magnetocapillary Swimmers: a Self-Assembled System to Study Locomotion, Transport Cargoes and Mix Fluids.

ORAL

Abstract

Because of capillary forces, small objects floating on a liquid tend to aggregate. Combined with a magnetic induction field, this effect can be used to assemble soft-ferromagnetic spheres into tunable structures. When they are exposed to oscillating magnetic fields, these assemblies spontaneously move along the interface. This is due to a breaking of time-reversal symmetry in their adopted shapes. These structures are conceptually simple, chemically inert, and spontaneously form without direct intervention or complex microfabrication process. Therefore, they offer a very wide range of possibilities, from the experimental study of the basic physical principles of locomotion, to the development of complex tasks such as cargo transport and fluid mixing.

*FNRS PDR grant T.0129.18 / DFG Priority Programme SPP 1726 / FNRS FRIA / FNRS Grant 2.5020.11

Authors

  • Galien Grosjean

    • University of Liege (ULiege)
  • Ylona Collard

    • University of Liege (ULiege)
    • University of Liege, GRASP, Institut de Physique B5a
  • Maxime Hubert

    • ULiege / Friedrich-Alexander University (FAU)
  • Alexander Sukhov

    • Helmholtz Institute Erlangen-Nurenberg (HI-ERN)
  • Jens Harting

    • HI-ERN / Eindhoven University of Technology
  • Ana-Suncana Smith

    • FAU / Institute Ruder Boskovic
  • Vandewalle Nicolas

    • University of Liege
    • ULiege
    • University of Liege, GRASP, Institut de Physique B5a