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Published February 2016 | public
Journal Article

Forces, Stresses and the (Thermo?) Dynamics of Active Matter

Abstract

The statistical mechanics and microhydrodynamics of active matter systems have been studied intensively during the past several years, by various soft matter physicists, chemists, engineers, and biologists around the world. Recent attention has focused on the fascinating nonequilibrium behaviors of active matter that cannot be observed in equilibrium thermodynamic systems, such as spontaneous collective motion and swarming. Even minimal kinetic models of active Brownian particles exhibit self-assembly that resembles a gas–liquid phase separation from classical equilibrium systems. Self-propulsion allows active systems to generate internal stresses that enable them to control and direct their own behavior and that of their surroundings. In this Review we discuss the forces that govern the motion of active Brownian microswimmers, the stress (or pressure) they generate, and the implication of these concepts on their collective behavior. We focus on recent work involving the unique 'swim pressure' exerted by active systems, and discuss how this perspective may be the basic underlying physical mechanism responsible for self-assembly and pattern formation in all active matter. We discuss the utility of the swim pressure concept to quantify the forces, stresses, and the (thermo?) dynamics of active matter.

Additional Information

© 2015 Elsevier Ltd. Received 13 December 2015, Revised 22 December 2015, Accepted 23 December 2015, Available online 6 January 2016.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023