Abstract
Fluid flow is ubiquitous in many environments that form habitats for microorganisms. The tendency of organisms to navigate towards or away from flow is
termed rheotaxis. Therefore, it is not surprising that both biological and artificial microswimmers show responses to flows that are determined by the interplay of chemical and physical factors. In particular, to deepen understanding of how different systems respond to flows, it is crucial to comprehend the influence played by swimming pattern. In recent studies, pusher-type Janus particles exhibited cross-stream migration in externally applied flows. Earlier, theoretical studies predicted a positive rheotactic response for puller-type spherical Janus micromotors. To compare to a different swimmer, we introduce Cu@SiO2 micromotors that swim towards their catalytic cap. Based on
experimental observations, and supported by flow field calculations using a model for self-electrophoresis, we hypothesize that they behave effectively as a puller-type system. We investigate the effect of externally imposed flow on these spherically symmetrical Cu@SiO2 active Janus colloids, and we indeedobserve a steady upstream directional response. Through a simple squirmer
model for a puller, we recover the major experimental observations. Additionally, the model predicts a unique “jumping” behaviour for puller-type micro- motors at high flow speeds. Performing additional experiments at high flow speeds, we capture this phenomenon, in which the particles “roll” with their
swimming axes aligned to the shear plane, in addition to being dragged down- stream by the fluid flow.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting info
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setup and zeta potentials
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SI video 1
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copper Janus particles in H2O2
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SI video 2
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copper Janus particles in H2O2 in low flow - rheotaxis
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SI video 3
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copper Janus particles in H2O2 in high flow - jumping
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