Propulsion of magnetically actuated achiral swimmers in complex fluids.
POSTER
Abstract
Recently reported achiral microswimmers can be massively fabricated at low cost and are envisioned for used in future in vivo biomedical applications, such as drug delivery and minimally invasive surgeries. Towards this goal, we report on the propulsion of two-dimensional magnetic microswimmers, fabricated through photolithography, and actuated in dilute methylcellulose solutions. We observed that the microswimmers displayed increased swimming speeds in certain polymer concentrations. Furthermore, we observed that the reduction rate of achiral microswimmers' precession angle increases with the concentration of the polymer weight percent. Upon understanding the underlying principles, more effective control strategies can be implemented on achiral microswimmers to perform biomedical tasks. These observations suggest that achiral microswimmers have similar speed enhancement to those well known to exist for chiral simmers in complex media.
*Acknowledgment: This work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC, 51850410516), Science and Technology Innovation Committee Foundation of Shenzhen (JCYJ20180302174151692), Shenzhen municipal government (Peacock Plan, 20181119590C), Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST, BG20190232001) awarded to U Kei Cheang. And NSF Grants HDR-2000202; CMMI-2000330; HDR-1735968 awarded to Jamel Ali.