Physics of microswimmers—single particle motion and collective behavior: a review
JEJ ElgetiRGR G WinklerGGG Gompper
Indexed inarxivcrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Locomotion and transport of microorganisms in fluids is an essential aspect of life. Search for food, orientation toward light, spreading of off-spring, and the formation of colonies are only possible due to locomotion. Swimming at the microscale occurs at low Reynolds numbers, where fluid friction and viscosity dominates over inertia. Here, evolution achieved propulsion mechanisms, which overcome and even exploit drag. Prominent propulsion mechanisms are rotating helical flagella, exploited by many bacteria, and snake-like or whip-like motion of eukaryotic flagella, utilized by sperm and algae. For artificial microswimmers, alternative concepts to convert chemical energy or heat into directed motion can be…
Citation impact
1,358
total citations
- FWCI
- 88.53
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 370
Citations per year
Authors
3- JEJ ElgetiCorresponding
Forschungszentrum Jülich
- RGR G Winkler
- GGG Gompper
Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Propulsion
- Active matter
- Microscale chemistry
- Collective motion
- Mechanism (biology)
- Reynolds number
- Isotropy
- Collective behavior
No related works found for this paper.