Pressure of Active Matter
What is active matter? Some examples:
Self-propelled colloidal particles Swimming Cells
Grains on vibrating plate
Is there a FIF in active matter?
"Fluctuation-Induced Casimir Forces in Granular Fluids,"
C. Cattuto, R. Brito, U.M.B. Marconi, F. Nori, and R. Soto, Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 178001 (2006)
"Nonadditivity of Fluctuation-Induced Forces in Fluidized Granular Media,"
M.R. Shaebani1, J. Sarabadani, and D.E. Wolf, Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 198001 (2012)
"Casimir effect in actice mtter systems,"
D. Ray, C. Reichhardt, and C.J. Olson Reichhardt, Phys. Rev. E 90, 013019 (2014)
"What is the Pressure of an Active Particle Fluid?," (Is pressure well-defined?)
A. P. Solon, Y. Fily, A. Baskaran, M. E. Cates, Y. Kafri, M. Kardar, J. Tailleur, arXiv:1412.3952:
Two common models are Run and Tumble Particles, and Active Brownian Particles:
Force and pressure can be measured by introducing a wall potential:
"What is the Pressure of an Active Particle Fluid?,"
A. P. Solon, Y. Fily, A. Baskaran, M. E. Cates, Y. Kafri, M. Kardar, J. Tailleur, arXiv:1412.3952 (2015):
Response of an active particle at a wall also needs to be specified:
No equation of state since pressure depends on the wall potential!
For non-interacting ellipses, pressure decreases when the torque increases:
vs.