24–25 Oct 2024
Barcelona
CET timezone

Collective Buoyancy-driven Dynamics in Swarming Enzymatic Nanomotors

24 Oct 2024, 16:51
3m
Faculty of Chemistry / Enric Casassas, Aula Magna (Barcelona)

Faculty of Chemistry / Enric Casassas, Aula Magna

Barcelona

Speaker

Shuqin Chen

Description

Enzymatic nanomotors harvest kinetic energy through the catalysis of chemical fuels. When a drop containing nanomotors is placed in a fuel-rich environment, they assemble into ordered groups and exhibit intriguing collective behaviour akin to the bioconvection of aerobic microorganismal suspensions. This collective behaviour presents numerous advantages compared to individual nanomotors, including expanded coverage and prolonged propulsion duration. However, the physical mechanisms underlying the collective motion have yet to be fully elucidated. Our study investigates the formation of enzymatic swarms using experimental analysis and computational modeling. We show that the directional movement of enzymatic nanomotor swarms is due to their solutal buoyancy. We investigate various factors that impact the movement of nanomotor swarms, such as particle concentration, fuel concentration, fuel viscosity, and vertical confinement. We examine the effects of these factors on swarm self-organization to gain a deeper understanding. In addition, the urease catalysis reaction produces ammonia and carbon dioxide, accelerating the directional movement of active swarms in urea compared with passive ones in the same conditions. The numerical analysis agrees with the experimental findings. Our findings are crucial for the potential biomedical applications of enzymatic nanomotor swarms, ranging from enhanced diffusion in bio-fluids and targeted delivery to cancer therapy.

Primary author

Co-authors

Dr Anna C. Bakenecker (Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia) Dr Florencia Lezcano (Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia) Prof. Igor S Aranson (Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University) Prof. Samuel Sánchez (Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia) Mr Xander Peetroons (Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia)

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