In this paper, we present a low cost approach to produce large-area polymer sheets with sub-wavelength nanostructures. The fabricated polymer films would have great potentials to attach to optical or solar-cell-related consumer products when anti-reflection/anti-glaring is mandatory. We employed a special electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma process to fabricate the SWSs with large area directly on silicon substrates. Homogeneously distributed nanotips on the full 4 inch silicon substrate were fabricated by using gas mixtures of silane, methane, argon and hydrogen. An Ni-Co metal mold with a hardness of 550 HV was produced through the replication of the Si mold by electroplating. Afterwards, the molding process was applied to manufacture the nanostructures in PMMA plates in large volume. The nanostructures in PMMA plates with aspect ratios of 4 and diameters of 150 nm were fabricated. The fabricated PMMA sheets could generate the gradient of the refractive indices, absorb the light and greatly reduce the reflectivity. Compared with the PMMA without SWSs, the reflectivity of PMMA with SWSs decreased dramatically from 4.25% to 0.5% at the wavelength of light from 400 to 800 nm.
Collective motion in nonequilibrium steady state suspensions of self-propelled Janus motors driven by chemical reactions can arise due to interactions coming from direct intermolecular forces, hydrodynamic flow effects, or chemotactic effects mediated by chemical gradients. The relative importance of these interactions depends on the reactive characteristics of the motors, the way in which the system is maintained in a steady state, and properties of the suspension, such as the volume fraction. From simulations of a microscopic hard collision model for the interaction of fluid particles with the Janus motor we show that dynamic cluster states exist and determine the interaction mechanisms that are responsible for their formation. The relative importance of chemotactic and hydrodynamic effects is identified by considering a microscopic model in which chemotactic effects are turned off while the full hydrodynamic interactions are retained. The system is maintained in a steady state by means of a bulk reaction in which product particles are reconverted into fuel particles. The influence of the bulk reaction rate on the collective dynamics is also studied.
Very small synthetic motors that make use of chemical reactions to propel themselves in solution hold promise for new applications in the development of new materials, science and medicine. The prospect of such potential applications, along with the fact that systems with many motors or active elements display interesting cooperative phenomena of fundamental interest, has made the study of synthetic motors an active research area. Janus motors, comprising catalytic and noncatalytic hemispheres, figure prominently in experimental and theoretical studies of these systems. While continuum models of Janus particle systems are often used to describe motor dynamics, microscopic models that are able to account for intermolecular interactions, many-body concentration gradients, fluid flows and thermal fluctuations provide a way to explore the dynamical behavior of these complex out-of-equilibrium systems that does not rely on approximations that are often made in continuum theories. The analysis of microscopic models from first principles provides a foundation from which the range of validity and limitations of approximate theories of the dynamics may be assessed. In this paper, a microscopic model for the diffusiophoretic propulsion of Janus motors, where motor interactions with the environment occur only through hard collisions, is constructed, analyzed and compared to theoretical predictions. Microscopic simulations of both single-motor and many-motor systems are carried out to illustrate the results.
Active matter, some of whose constituent elements are active agents that can move autonomously, behaves very differently from matter without such agents. The active agents can self-assemble into structures with a variety of forms and dynamical properties. Swarming, where groups of living agents move cooperatively, is commonly observed in the biological realm, but it is also seen in the physical realm in systems containing small synthetic motors. The existence of diverse forms of self-assembled structures has stimulated the search for new applications that involve active matter. We consider active systems where the agents are synthetic chemically powered motors with various shapes and sizes that operate by phoretic mechanisms, especially self-diffusiophoresis. These motors are able to move autonomously in solution by consuming fuel from their environment. Chemical reactions take place on catalytic portions of the motor surface and give rise to concentration gradients that lead to directed motion. They can operate in this way only if the chemical composition of the system is maintained in a nonequilibrium state since no net fluxes are possible in a system at equilibrium. In contrast to many other active systems, chemistry plays an essential part in determining the properties of the collective dynamics and self-assembly of these chemically powered motor systems. The inhomogeneous concentration fields that result from asymmetric motor reactions are felt by other motors in the system and strongly influence how they move. This chemical coupling effect often dominates other interactions due to fluid flow fields and direct interactions among motors and determines the form that the collective dynamics takes. Since we consider small motors with micrometer and nanometer sizes, thermal fluctuations are strong and cannot be neglected. The media in which the motors operate may not be simple and may contain crowding agents or molecular filaments that influence how the motors assemble and move. The collective motion is also influenced by the chemical gradients that arise from reactions in the surrounding medium. By adopting a microscopic perspective, where the motors, fluid environment, and crowding elements are treated at the coarse-grained molecular level, all of the many-body interactions that give rise to the collective behavior naturally emerge from the molecular dynamics. Through simulations and theory, this Account describes how active matter made from chemically powered nanomotors moving in simple and more complicated media can form different dynamical structures that are strongly influenced by interactions arising from cooperative chemical reactions on the motor surfaces.
Active protein inclusions in biological membranes can represent nano-swimmers and propel themselves in lipid bilayers. A simple model of an active inclusion with three particles (domains) connected by variable elastic links is considered. First, the membrane is modeled as a two-dimensional viscous fluid and propulsion behavior in two dimensions is examined. After that, an example of a microscopic dynamical simulation is presented, where the lipid bilayer structure of the membrane is resolved and the solvent effects are included by multiparticle collision dynamics. Statistical analysis of data reveals ballistic motion of the swimmer, in contrast to the classical diffusion behavior found in the absence of active transitions between the states.
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