Creating Reconfigurable Materials Using ``Colonies'' of Oscillating Polymer Gels

POSTER

Abstract

Species ranging from single-cell organisms to social insects can undergo auto-chemotaxis, where the entities move towards a chemo-attractant that they themselves emit. This mode of signaling allows the organisms to form large-scale structures. Using computational modeling, we show that millimeter-sized polymer gels can display similar auto-chemotaxis. In particular, we demonstrate that gels undergoing the self-oscillating Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction not only respond to a chemical signal from the surrounding solution, but also emit this signal and thus, multiple gel pieces can spontaneously self-aggregate. We focus on the collective behavior of ``colonies'' of BZ gels and show that communication between the individual pieces critically depends on all the neighboring gels. We isolate the conditions at which the BZ gels can undergo a type of self-recombining: if a larger gel is cut into distinct pieces that are moved relatively far apart, then their auto-chemotactic behavior drives them to move and autonomously recombine into a structure resembling the original, uncut sample. These findings reveal that the BZ gels can be used as autonomously moving building blocks to construct multiple structures and thus, provide a new route for creating dynamically reconfigurable materials.

Authors

  • Debabrata Deb

    • University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
    • University of Pittsburgh
  • Pratyush Dayal

    • Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar
  • Olga Kuksenok

    • University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
    • University of Pittsburgh
    • Chemical Engineering Dept, University of Pittsburgh
  • Anna Balazs

    • Department of Chemical \& Petroleum Engineering, University of Pittsburgh
    • Dept. of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering, University of Pittsburgh
    • University of Pittsburgh
    • University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh
    • Chemical Engineering Dept., University of Pittsburgh
    • Chemical Engineering Dept, University of Pittsburgh