English

Propelling catalytic structures using active phase separation

Soft Condensed Matter 2026-05-01 v1 Statistical Mechanics Biological Physics

Abstract

Living systems routinely consume energy to achieve motility, often using intricate biomolecular machinery. In this work, we show that active droplets can sustain indefinite self-propulsion of a spherical colloid in an otherwise homogeneous, isotropic, and autonomous environment. Our proposed minimal mechanism consists of phase-separating proteins, enzymes passivating them, and complementary enzymes anchored to the colloid surface that reactivate the proteins. This passivation-activation cycle gives rise to a symmetry breaking - nucleation and stabilization of a condensate near the colloid surface, which in turn exerts a repulsive force on the colloid. We numerically demonstrate that this mechanism can propel micron-sized colloids at speeds of up to a hundred microns per second. This propulsion mode is strongly resistant to Brownian fluctuations and external forces, suggesting that propulsion mechanisms based on biomolecular condensates may offer a complementary, motor-free route to biological transport.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2604.27965,
  title  = {Propelling catalytic structures using active phase separation},
  author = {Benjamin Sorkin and Ned S. Wingreen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.27965},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

19 pages, 7 figures