Microscale Magneto-Elastic Composite Swimmers at the Air-Water and Water-Solid Interfaces Under a Uniaxial Field

Matthew Bryan, Jose Garcia-Torres, Elizabeth Martin, Joshua Hamilton, Carles Calero, Peter Petrov, Charles Winlove, Ignacio Pagonabarraga, Pietro Tierno, Francesc Sagues, Feodor Ogrin

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Abstract

Self-propulsion of magneto-elastic composite microswimmers was demonstrated under a uniaxial field at both the air-water and the water-substrate interfaces. The microswimmers were made of elastically-linked magnetically hard CoNiP and soft Co ferromagnets, fabricated using standard photolithography and electrodeposition. Swimming speed and direction were dependent on the field frequency and amplitude, reaching a maximum of 95.1 µm/s on the substrate surface. Fastest motion occurred at low frequencies, via a spinning (air-water interface) or tumbling (water-substrate interface) mode that induced transient inertial motion. Higher frequencies resulted in low Reynolds number propagation at both interfaces via a rocking mode. Therefore the same microswimmer could be operated as either a high or a low Reynolds number swimmer. Swimmer pairs agglomerated to form a faster superstructure that propelled via spinning and rocking modes analogous to those seen in isolated swimmers. Microswimmer propulsion was driven by a combination of dipolar interactions between the Co and CoNiP magnets and rotational torque due to the applied field, combined with elastic deformation and hydrodynamic interactions between different parts of the swimmer, in agreement with previous models.
Original languageEnglish
Article number044019
Pages (from-to)1-12
Number of pages12
JournalPhysical Review Applied
Volume11
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Apr 2019

Keywords

  • microswimmer
  • low Reynolds number
  • magnetic swimmer
  • magneto-elastic

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