Megan S. Davies Wykes
University of Cambridge
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Publication
Featured researches published by Megan S. Davies Wykes.
Soft Matter | 2016
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Jeremie Palacci; Takuji Adachi; Leif Ristroph; Xiao Zhong; Michael D. Ward; Jun Zhang; Michael Shelley
Biological systems often involve the self-assembly of basic components into complex and functioning structures. Artificial systems that mimic such processes can provide a well-controlled setting to explore the principles involved and also synthesize useful micromachines. Our experiments show that immotile, but active, components self-assemble into two types of structure that exhibit the fundamental forms of motility: translation and rotation. Specifically, micron-scale metallic rods are designed to induce extensile surface flows in the presence of a chemical fuel; these rods interact with each other and pair up to form either a swimmer or a rotor. Such pairs can transition reversibly between these two configurations, leading to kinetics reminiscent of bacterial run-and-tumble motion.
Soft Matter | 2017
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Xiao Zhong; Jiajun Tong; Takuji Adachi; Yanpeng Liu; Leif Ristroph; Michael D. Ward; Michael Shelley; Jun Zhang
The swimming direction of biological or artificial microscale swimmers tends to be randomised over long time-scales by thermal fluctuations. Bacteria use various strategies to bias swimming behaviour and achieve directed motion against a flow, maintain alignment with gravity or travel up a chemical gradient. Herein, we explore a purely geometric means of biasing the motion of artificial nanorod swimmers. These artificial swimmers are bimetallic rods, powered by a chemical fuel, which swim on a substrate printed with teardrop-shaped posts. The artificial swimmers are hydrodynamically attracted to the posts, swimming alongside the post perimeter for long times before leaving. The rods experience a higher rate of departure from the higher curvature end of the teardrop shape, thereby introducing a bias into their motion. This bias increases with swimming speed and can be translated into a macroscopic directional motion over long times by using arrays of teardrop-shaped posts aligned along a single direction. This method provides a protocol for concentrating swimmers, sorting swimmers according to different speeds, and could enable artificial swimmers to transport cargo to desired locations.
Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2014
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Stuart B. Dalziel
Journal of Fluid Mechanics | 2015
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Graham O. Hughes; Stuart B. Dalziel
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Xiao Zhong; Takiji Adachi; Yanpeng Liu; Jiajun Tong; Leif Ristroph; Michael D. Ward; Jun Zhang; Michael Shelley
arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2018
John Craske; Megan S. Davies Wykes
arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2018
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Charlie Hogg; Jamie Partridge; Graham O. Hughes
Physical Review Fluids | 2018
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Jinzi Mac Huang; George A. Hajjar; Leif Ristroph
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Megan S. Davies Wykes
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Megan S. Davies Wykes; Andrew Lawrie; Stuart B. Dalziel