Minimal mechanism for flocking in phoretically interacting active particles
Abstract
Coherent collective motion is a widely observed phenomenon in active matter systems. Here, we report a flocking transition mechanism in a system of chemically interacting active colloidal particles sustained purely by chemo-repulsive torques at low to medium densities. The basic requirements to maintain the global polar order are excluded volume repulsions and long-ranged repulsive torques. This mechanism requires that the time scale individual colloids move a unit length to be dominant with respect to the time they deterministically respond to chemical gradients, or equivalently, pair colloids sliding together a minimal unit length before deterministically rotating away from each other. Switching on the translational repulsive forces renders the flock a crystalline structure. Furthermore, liquid flocks are observed for a range of chemo-attractive inter-particle forces. Various properties of these two distinct flocking phases are contrasted and discussed. We complement these results with stability analysis of a hydrodynamic model, which admits the transition corresponding to destabilization of the flocking state observed in particle-based simulations.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2504.07050,
title = {Minimal mechanism for flocking in phoretically interacting active particles},
author = {Arvin Gopal Subramaniam and Sagarika Adhikary and Rajesh Singh},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.07050},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
13 pages, 8 figures; to appear in Soft Matter