(46a) Mechanisms of Transport Enhancement for Self-Propelled Nanoswimmers in a Porous Matrix | AIChE

(46a) Mechanisms of Transport Enhancement for Self-Propelled Nanoswimmers in a Porous Matrix

Authors 

Wu, H. - Presenter, University of Colorado Boulder
Greydanus, B., University of Colorado Boulder
Schwartz, D. K., University of Colorado Boulder
Micro/nanoswimmers convert diverse energy sources into directional movement, demonstrating tremendous promise for biomedical and environmental applications, many of which involve complex tortuous or crowded environments. Here, we investigated the transport behavior of self-propelled catalytic Janus particles in a complex interconnected porous void-space, where the rate-determining step involves the escape from a cavity and translocation through holes to adjacent cavities. Surprisingly, self-propelled nanoswimmers escaped from cavities more than 20x faster than passive (Brownian) particles, despite the fact that the mobility of nanoswimmers was less than 2x greater than that of passive particles in unconfined bulk liquid. Combining experimental measurements, Monte Carlo simulations and theoretical calculations, we found that the escape of nanoswimmers was enhanced by nuanced secondary effects of self-propulsion which were amplified in combined environments. In particular, active escape was facilitated by anomalously rapid confined short-time mobility, highly efficient surface-mediated searching for holes, and the effective abolition of entropic and/or electrostatic barriers at the exit hole regions by propulsion forces. The latter mechanism converted the escape process from barrier-limited to search-limited. These findings provide general and important insights into micro/nanoswimmer mobility in complex environments.