Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics

Active matter, comprising many active agents interacting and moving in fluids or more complex environments, is a commonly occurring state of matter in biological and physical systems. By its very nature, active matter systems exist in nonequilibrium states. In this paper, the active agents are small...

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Main Authors: Pierre Gaspard, Raymond Kapral
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Association for the Advancement of Science 2020-01-01
Series:Research
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2020/9739231
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spelling doaj-05f36d33182f4baea8761c56e946ab912020-11-25T02:51:50ZengAmerican Association for the Advancement of ScienceResearch2639-52742020-01-01202010.34133/2020/9739231Active Matter, Microreversibility, and ThermodynamicsPierre Gaspard0Raymond Kapral1Center for Nonlinear Phenomena and Complex Systems,Université Libre de Bruxelles (U.L.B.),Code Postal 231,Campus Plaine, B-1050 Brussels,BelgiumChemical Physics Theory Group,Department of Chemistry,University of Toronto,Toronto, Ontario,CanadaActive matter, comprising many active agents interacting and moving in fluids or more complex environments, is a commonly occurring state of matter in biological and physical systems. By its very nature, active matter systems exist in nonequilibrium states. In this paper, the active agents are small Janus colloidal particles that use chemical energy provided by chemical reactions occurring on their surfaces for propulsion through a diffusiophoretic mechanism. As a result of interactions among these colloids, either directly or through fluid velocity and concentration fields, they may act collectively to form structures such as dynamic clusters. A general nonequilibrium thermodynamics framework for the description of such systems is presented that accounts for both self-diffusiophoresis and diffusiophoresis due to external concentration gradients, and is consistent with microreversibility. It predicts the existence of a reciprocal effect of diffusiophoresis back onto the reaction rate for the entire collection of colloids in the system, as well as the existence of a clustering instability that leads to nonequilibrium inhomogeneous system states.http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2020/9739231
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pierre Gaspard
Raymond Kapral
spellingShingle Pierre Gaspard
Raymond Kapral
Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics
Research
author_facet Pierre Gaspard
Raymond Kapral
author_sort Pierre Gaspard
title Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics
title_short Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics
title_full Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics
title_fullStr Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics
title_full_unstemmed Active Matter, Microreversibility, and Thermodynamics
title_sort active matter, microreversibility, and thermodynamics
publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science
series Research
issn 2639-5274
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Active matter, comprising many active agents interacting and moving in fluids or more complex environments, is a commonly occurring state of matter in biological and physical systems. By its very nature, active matter systems exist in nonequilibrium states. In this paper, the active agents are small Janus colloidal particles that use chemical energy provided by chemical reactions occurring on their surfaces for propulsion through a diffusiophoretic mechanism. As a result of interactions among these colloids, either directly or through fluid velocity and concentration fields, they may act collectively to form structures such as dynamic clusters. A general nonequilibrium thermodynamics framework for the description of such systems is presented that accounts for both self-diffusiophoresis and diffusiophoresis due to external concentration gradients, and is consistent with microreversibility. It predicts the existence of a reciprocal effect of diffusiophoresis back onto the reaction rate for the entire collection of colloids in the system, as well as the existence of a clustering instability that leads to nonequilibrium inhomogeneous system states.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/2020/9739231
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AT raymondkapral activemattermicroreversibilityandthermodynamics
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