A common feature of biological self-organization is how active agents communicate with each other or their environment via chemical signaling. Such communications, mediated by self-generated chemical gradients, have consequences for both individual motility strategies and collective migration patterns. Here, in a purely physicochemical system, we use self-propelling droplets as a model for chemically active particles that modify their environment by leaving chemical footprints, which act as chemorepulsive signals to other droplets. We analyze this communication mechanism quantitatively both on the scale of individual agent-trail collisions as well as on the collective scale where droplets actively remodel their environment while adapting th...
The creation of synthetic systems that emulate the defining properties of living matter, such as mot...
Active emulsions can spontaneously form self-propelled droplets or phoretic micropumps. It has been ...
Microscopic active droplets are able to swim autonomously in viscous flows: this puzzling feature st...
A common feature of biological self-organization is how active agents communicate with each other or...
Chemotaxis and auto-chemotaxis are key mechanisms in the dynamics of micro-organisms, e.g. in the ac...
Chemotaxis and autochemotaxis play an important role in many essential biological processes. We pres...
Active matter is a collection of constituent elements that constantly consume energy, convert it to ...
Chemotactic interactions are ubiquitous in nature and can lead to non-reciprocal and complex emergen...
We study water-in-oil emulsion droplets, running the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction, that form a new ...
Conspectus: The ability to navigate in chemical gradients, called chemotaxis, is crucial for the sur...
Active emulsions, i.e., emulsions whose droplets perform self-propelled motion, are of tremendous in...
Artificial model swimmers offer a platform to explore the physical principles enabling biological co...
We demonstrate that migration away from self-produced chemicals (chemorepulsion) generates a generic...
Abstract. We study water-in-oil emulsion droplets, running the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction, that f...
Swimming droplets are artificial microswimmers based on liquid droplets that show self-propelled mot...
The creation of synthetic systems that emulate the defining properties of living matter, such as mot...
Active emulsions can spontaneously form self-propelled droplets or phoretic micropumps. It has been ...
Microscopic active droplets are able to swim autonomously in viscous flows: this puzzling feature st...
A common feature of biological self-organization is how active agents communicate with each other or...
Chemotaxis and auto-chemotaxis are key mechanisms in the dynamics of micro-organisms, e.g. in the ac...
Chemotaxis and autochemotaxis play an important role in many essential biological processes. We pres...
Active matter is a collection of constituent elements that constantly consume energy, convert it to ...
Chemotactic interactions are ubiquitous in nature and can lead to non-reciprocal and complex emergen...
We study water-in-oil emulsion droplets, running the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction, that form a new ...
Conspectus: The ability to navigate in chemical gradients, called chemotaxis, is crucial for the sur...
Active emulsions, i.e., emulsions whose droplets perform self-propelled motion, are of tremendous in...
Artificial model swimmers offer a platform to explore the physical principles enabling biological co...
We demonstrate that migration away from self-produced chemicals (chemorepulsion) generates a generic...
Abstract. We study water-in-oil emulsion droplets, running the Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction, that f...
Swimming droplets are artificial microswimmers based on liquid droplets that show self-propelled mot...
The creation of synthetic systems that emulate the defining properties of living matter, such as mot...
Active emulsions can spontaneously form self-propelled droplets or phoretic micropumps. It has been ...
Microscopic active droplets are able to swim autonomously in viscous flows: this puzzling feature st...