posted on 2024-12-23, 15:28authored bySuzanne Ahmed, Juan Perez-Mercader
We report the interactions and dynamics of chemically
powered soft
swimmers that undergo autonomous oscillatory motion. The interaction
of autonomous entities is the basis for the development of collective
behaviors among biological organisms. Collective behaviors enable
organisms to efficiently attain food and coordinate against threats.
The basis of these behaviors is the interaction between nearest neighbors.
Mimicking these interactions in artificial systems would enable their
organization for the performance of complex tasks. Oscillatory phenomena
are also ubiquitous in nature. Hence artificial oscillatory systems
can serve as the most direct mimics and models of many biological
systems. In this work, we report the interactions and dynamics of
oscillatory swimmers propelled by the nonlinear oscillatory Belousov–Zhabotinsky
(BZ) reaction. Individually, these swimmers displace by undergoing
nonfully reciprocal oscillatory motion in conjunction with the BZ
reaction. We find that, in addition to their individual oscillatory
motion, multiple BZ swimmers exhibit successive oscillatory changes
in their inter swimmer distance. This oscillatory attraction and repulsion
between adjacent swimmers occurs in conjunction with the BZ waves
and oxidation state of the catalyst. The effect of swimmer size and
number on these dynamic interactions is interrogated. The level of
chemical synchronization between multiple swimmers is determined.
This work is a starting point for the design of collective behaviors
utilizing autonomous chemically propelled soft swimmers.