Self-oscillating synchronematic colloids

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Self-oscillators that sustain periodic dynamics under constant input are ubiquitous in natural and engineered systems, where their interactions enable spatiotemporal coordination among many individual units. New forms of organization can emerge when these self-oscillating units are free to move and rotate, coupling their spatial arrangement and alignment with their oscillation frequencies and phases. Here, we report experiments and simulations on populations of Quincke colloids that behave as self-oscillating units with position, orientation, frequency, and phase. Depending on the initial distribution, these active oscillators spontaneously organize into distinct collective states characterized by temporal synchronization and directional alignment, which we term synchronematic order. In fluid-like clusters, this order is short-ranged and decays over a length scale set by the competition between hydrodynamic interactions and athermal noise. In crystalline clusters, these interactions drive flobal synchronization and circular alignment-synchronematic crystals-whose collective frequency increases with cluster size due to non-reciprocal interactions. Our results establish self-oscillating colloids as a model system for active oscillatory matter and reveal fundamental principles by which synchronization, alignment, and structure co-emerge, offering new pathways for designing adaptive, frequency-tunable materials.

Article activity feed