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4 results for au:Chisholm_N in:cond-mat
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The behavior of fluid interfaces far from equilibrium plays central roles in nature and in industry. Active swimmers trapped at interfaces can alter transport at fluid boundaries with far reaching implications. Swimmers can become trapped at interfaces in diverse configurations and swim persistently in these surface adhered states. The self-propelled motion of bacteria makes them ideal model swimmers to understand such effects. We have recently characterized the swimming of interfacially-trapped Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA01 moving in pusher mode. The swimmers adsorb at the interface with pinned contact lines, which fix the angle of the cell body at the interface and constrain their motion. Thus, most interfacially-trapped bacteria swim along circular paths. Fluid interfaces form incompressible two-dimensional layers, altering leading order interfacial flows generated by the swimmers from those in bulk. In our previous work, we have visualized the interfacial flow around a pusher bacterium and described the flow field using two dipolar hydrodynamic modes; one stresslet mode whose symmetries differ from those in bulk, and another bulk mode unique to incompressible fluid interfaces. Based on this understanding, swimmers-induced tracer displacements and swimmer-swimmer pair interactions are explored using analysis and experiment. The settings in which multiple interfacial swimmers with circular motion can significantly enhance interfacial transport of tracers or promotemixing of other swimmers on the interface are identified through simulations and compared to experiment. This study identifies important factors of general interest regarding swimmers on or near fluid boundaries, and in the design of biomimetic swimmers to enhance transport at interfaces
We derive expressions for the leading-order far-field flows generated by externally driven and active (swimming) colloids at planar fluid-fluid interfaces. We consider colloids adjacent to the interface or adhered to the interface with a pinned contact line. The Reynolds and capillary numbers are assumed much less than unity, in line with typical micron-scale colloids involving air- or alkane-aqueous interfaces. For driven colloids, the leading-order flow is given by the point-force (and/or torque) response of this system. For active colloids, the force-dipole (stresslet) response occurs at leading order. At clean (surfactant-free) interfaces, these hydrodynamic modes are essentially a restricted set of the usual Stokes multipoles in a bulk fluid. To leading order, driven colloids exert Stokeslets parallel to the interface, while active colloids drive differently oriented stresslets depending on the colloid's orientation. We then consider how these modes are altered by the presence of an incompressible interface, a typical circumstance for colloidal systems at small capillary numbers in the presence of surfactant. The leading-order modes for driven and active colloids are restructured dramatically. For driven colloids, interfacial incompressibility substantially weakens the far-field flow normal to the interface; the point-force response drives flow only parallel to the interface. However, Marangoni stresses induce a new dipolar mode, which lacks an analogue on a clean interface. Surface-viscous stresses, if present, potentially generate very long-ranged flow on the interface and the surrounding fluids. Our results have important implications for colloid assembly and advective mass transport enhancement near fluid boundaries.
We demonstrate a method of magnetic resonance imaging with single nuclear-spin sensitivity under ambient conditions. It employs a network of isolated electronic-spin quantum bits (qubits) that act as quantum reporters on the surface of high purity diamond. The reporter spins are localized with nanometer-scale uncertainty, and their quantum state is coherently manipulated and measured optically via a proximal nitrogen-vacancy (NV) color center located a few nanometers below the diamond surface. The quantum reporter network is then used for sensing, coherent coupling and imaging individual proton spins on the diamond surface with angstrom resolution. This approach may enable direct structural imaging of complex molecules that cannot be accessed from bulk studies. It realizes a new platform for probing novel materials, monitoring chemical reactions, and manipulation of complex systems on surfaces at a quantum level.
A. O. Sushkov, N. Chisholm, I. Lovchinsky, M. Kubo, P. K. Lo, S. D. Bennett, D. Hunger, A. Akimov, R. L. Walsworth, H. Park, M. D. Lukin We demonstrate an all-optical method for magnetic sensing of individual molecules in ambient conditions at room temperature. Our approach is based on shallow nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers near the surface of a diamond crystal, which we use to detect single paramagnetic molecules covalently attached to the diamond surface. The manipulation and readout of the NV centers is all-optical and provides a sensitive probe of the magnetic field fluctuations stemming from the dynamics of the electronic spins of the attached molecules. As a specific example, we demonstrate detection of a single paramagnetic molecule containing a gadolinium (Gd$^{3+}$) ion. We confirm single-molecule resolution using optical fluorescence and atomic force microscopy to co-localize one NV center and one Gd$^{3+}$-containing molecule. Possible applications include nanoscale and in vivo magnetic spectroscopy and imaging of individual molecules.