articlePhysical Review LettersDec 20, 2010GREEN OA

Active Motion of a Janus Particle by Self-Thermophoresis in a Defocused Laser Beam

The University of Tokyo · Kyoto University

PubMed
Indexed inarxivcrossrefpubmed

Abstract

We study self-propulsion of a half-metal coated colloidal particle under laser irradiation. The motion is caused by self-thermophoresis: i.e., absorption of a laser at the metal-coated side of the particle creates local temperature gradient which in turn drives the particle by thermophoresis. To clarify the mechanism, temperature distribution and a thermal slip flow field around a microscale Janus particle are measured for the first time. With measured temperature drop across the particle, the speed of self-propulsion is corroborated with the prediction based on accessible parameters. As an application for driving a micromachine, a microrotor is demonstrated.

Citation impact

939
total citations
FWCI
27.87
Percentile
100%
References
22
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Thermophoresis
  • Microscale chemistry
  • Janus particles
  • Materials science
  • Microscale thermophoresis
  • Temperature gradient
  • Particle (ecology)
  • Mechanics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Affordable and clean energy
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