Present hopes to conquer the Covid-19 epidemic are largely based on the expectation of a rapid availability of vaccines. However, once vaccine production starts, it will probably take time before there is enough vaccine for everyone, evoking the question how to distribute it best. While present vaccination guidelines largely focus on individual-based factors, i.e. on the question to whom vaccines should be provided first, e.g. to risk groups or to individuals with a strong social-mixing tendency, here we ask if a strategic spatiotemporal distribution of vaccines, e.g. to prioritize certain cities, can help to increase the overall survival rate of a population subject to an epidemic disease. To this end, we propose a strategy for the distribution of vaccines in time and space, which sequentially prioritizes regions with the most new cases of infection during a certain time frame and compare it with the standard practice of distributing vaccines demographically. Using a simple statistical model we find that, for a locally well-mixed population, the proposed strategy strongly reduces the number of deaths (by about a factor of two for basic reproduction numbers of $$R_0\sim 1.5-4$$ R 0 ∼ 1.5 - 4 and by about 35% for $$R_0\sim 1$$ R 0 ∼ 1 ). The proposed vaccine distribution strategy establishes the idea that prioritizing individuals not only regarding individual factors, such as their risk of spreading the disease, but also according to the region in which they live can help saving lives. The suggested vaccine distribution strategy can be tested in more detailed models in the future and might inspire discussions regarding the importance of spatiotemporal distribution rules for vaccination guidelines.
We create single-component photocatalytic bismuth vanadate (BiVO4) microswimmers with a spheroidal shape that move individually upon irradiation without any asymmetrization step. These particles form active assemblies which we investigate combining an experimental approach with numerical simulations and analytical calculations. We systematically explore the speed and assembly of the swimmers into clusters of up to four particles and find excellent agreement between experiment and theory, which helps us to understand motion patterns and speed trends. Moreover, different batches of particles can be functionalized separately, making them ideal candidates to fulfill a multitude of tasks, such as sensing or environmental remediation. To exemplify this, we coat our swimmers with silica (SiO2) and selectively couple some of their modules to fluorophores in a way which does not inhibit self-propulsion. The present work establishes spheroidal BiVO4 microswimmers as a versatile platform to design multifunctional microswimmers.
A large variety of microorganisms produce molecules to communicate via complex signaling mechanisms such as quorum sensing and chemotaxis. The biological diversity is enormous, but synthetic inanimate colloidal microswimmers mimic microbiological communication (synthetic chemotaxis) and may be used to explore collective behaviour beyond the one-species limit in simpler setups. In this work we combine particle based and continuum simulations as well as linear stability analyses, and study a physical minimal model of two chemotactic species. We observed a rich phase diagram comprising a "hunting swarm phase", where both species self-segregate and form swarms, pursuing, or hunting each other, and a "core-shell-cluster phase", where one species forms a dense cluster, which is surrounded by a (fluctuating) corona of particles from the other species. Once formed, these clusters can dynamically turn inside out, representing a "species-reversal". These results exemplify a physical route to collective behaviours in microorganisms and active colloids, which are so-far known to occur only for comparatively large and complex animals like insects or crustaceans.Chemotaxis -the movement of organisms in response to a chemical stimulus -allows them to navigate in complex environments, find food and avoid repellants. It is involved in many biological processes where microorganisms (or cells) coordinate their motion; these include wound healing, fertilization, pathogenic invasion of a host, and bacterial colonization [1, 2]. In such cases, microorganisms are attracted (or repelled) by certain substances (chemoattractants/ chemorepellents), but they are also attracted to chemicals produced by other microorganisms (or cells), such as cAMP in the case of Dictyostelium cells [3] or autoinducers in signaling Escherichia coli [4], which leads to chemical interactions (communication) among the microorganisms.While many existing models studying microbiological chemotaxis (or chemical interactions) focus on a single species [5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12], the typical situation in the microbiological habitat is that various different species simultaneously produce certain chemicals to which others respond via chemotaxis or based on quorum sensing mechanisms. One simple example involving chemical signaling across species is provided by macrophage-facilitated breast cancer cell invasion which has recently been modeled [13]. There, tumor cells attract macrophages, which are certain white blood cells normally playing a key role in the human immune system. They then control the physiological function of the macrophages and exploit their abilities. More specifically, the tumor cells produce the colony-stimulating factor (CSF-1) leading to the attraction and growth of macrophages which in turn release epidermal growth factors (EGF) resulting in the growth and mobility increase of the tumor cells (see Fig. 1).Similarly to microorganisms, synthetic inanimate colloids, coated with a material which catalyzes a certain reaction on (a part of) their surfa...
We study the collective dynamics of self-propelled rods in an inhomogeneous motility field. At the interface between two regions of constant but different motility, a smectic rod layer is spontaneously created through aligning interactions between the active rods, reminiscent of an artificial, semi-permeable membrane. This "active membrane" engulfes rods which are locally trapped in low-motility regions and thereby further enhances the trapping efficiency by self-organization, an effect which we call "self-encapsulation". Our results are gained by computer simulations of self-propelled rod models confined on a two-dimensional planar or spherical surface with a stepwise constant motility field, but the phenomenon should be observable in any geometry with sufficiently large spatial inhomogeneity. We also discuss possibilities to verify our predictions of active-membrane formation in experiments of self-propelled colloidal rods and vibrated granular matter.
Active matter comprises self-driven units, such as bacteria and synthetic microswimmers, that can spontaneously form complex patterns and assemble into functional microdevices. These processes are possible thanks to the out-of-equilibrium nature of active-matter systems, fueled by a one-way free-energy flow from the environment into the system. Here, we take the next step in the evolution of active matter by realizing a two-way coupling between active particles and their environment, where active particles act back on the environment giving rise to the formation of superstructures. In experiments and simulations we observe that, under light-illumination, colloidal particles and their near-critical environment create mutually-coupled co-evolving structures. These structures unify in the form of active superstructures featuring a droplet shape and a colloidal engine inducing self-propulsion. We call them active droploids—a portmanteau of droplet and colloids. Our results provide a pathway to create active superstructures through environmental feedback.
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