Run-and-Tumble Motion of Ellipsoidal Microswimmers

POSTER

Abstract

A hallmark of bacteria is their so-called "run-and-tumble" motion and its variants, consisting of a sequence of linear directed "runs" and distinct rotation events that constantly alternate due to biochemical feedback. It plays a crucial role in the ability of bacteria to move through chemical gradients and has inspired a fundamental active particle model. Nevertheless, synthetic active particles generally do not exhibit run-and-tumble motion but rather active Brownian motion. We show in experiments that ellipsoidal thermophoretic Janus particles, propelling along their short axis, can yield run-and-reverse motion, i.e., where rotation events flip the direction of motion, even without feedback. Their hydrodynamic wall interactions under strong confinement give rise to an effective double-well potential for the declination of the short axis. The geometry-induced timescale separation of the in-plane rotational dynamics and noise-induced transitions in the potential then yield run-and-reverse motion.

*Financial support by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG through Project No. 432421051 is acknowledged.

Publication: Anchutkin, G., Cichos, F. & Holubec, V. Run-and-tumble motion of ellipsoidal microswimmers. Phys. Rev. Res. 6, 043101 (2024).

Presenters

  • Frank Cichos

    • Molecular Nanophotonics Group, University Leipzig
    • Leipzig University

Authors

  • Frank Cichos

    • Molecular Nanophotonics Group, University Leipzig
    • Leipzig University
  • Gordei Anchutkin

    • Molecular Nanophotonics Group, Leipzig University
  • Viktor Holubec

    • Department of Macromolecular Physics, Charles University Prague