Simulation of light-absorbing microparticles in an optical landscape
Abstract
Simulating the dynamics of active particles play a key role in understanding the
many behaviours active matter can exhibit. Experimental studies are more costly
than simulations in this regard, as there is much work that needs to be performed
with setups and observation time. Computer simulations are a powerful and costeffective
supplements to experiments. One topic of study within active matter
is light-absorbing microparticles which are commonly made of silica with a lightabsorbing
metallic compound such as iron oxide or gold. One such microparticle
is the Janus particle, a silica particle with a hemispherical coating of gold as the
absorbing compound. When illuminated with a laser, the coating absorbs the light
and heats up rapidly, generating a temperature gradient which allows the Janus
particle to exhibit self-propulsion and clustering with other Janus particles due to
thermophoresis and Brownian motion.
In this thesis, I introduce a model which simulates light-absorbing microparticles
with a desired distribution of iron oxide in an optical landscape. In particular, the
case of an optical landscape characterized by a periodical sinusoidal intensity profile
of a given spatial periodicity will be considered.
The results show that for a hemispherical distribution (Janus particle) there is selfpropulsion
originating at the side of the cap, with super-diffusive characteristics.
When the laser periodicity is similar to the particle radius, it becomes confined between
two high intensity peaks. A particle with uniform distribution diffuses with
Brownian motion, with no self-propulsion. Clustering behaviour arises when multiple
particles are in close proximity to each other, as observed in experiments.
The agreement with experimental results opens up for the opportunity to simulate
other light-absorbing particles with different distributions of absorbing compounds.
Degree
student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2024-06-10Author
Lech, Alex
Keywords
active matter
thermophoresis
Brownian motion
Janus particle
anomalous diffusion
Language
eng