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Main Authors: Fischer, Jannis, Jurado, Alejandro, Betz, Timo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14918
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author Fischer, Jannis
Jurado, Alejandro
Betz, Timo
author_facet Fischer, Jannis
Jurado, Alejandro
Betz, Timo
contents Recent advances in the field of active soft matter promise a lot. Both, experimental advances and theoretical understanding point towards new material classes in reach, for example self-healing materials that might switch their properties from elastic to solid easily or switch their macroscopic shapes. All these materials require an active force to propel parts of themselves on the micrometer scale. While chemical fuels are often used to generate these active forces, applying energy in a simple and continuous way remains unsolved. Here we explore using light as such an energy source. Overall, generating active driven, self-propelled particles is hence not only of great interest but also a general challenge. Moreover, controlling such particles even within living tissue would open new worlds, for example to enable specific drug delivery or the design of micro-robots. One recently proposed method to establish light driven self propelled particles is to create specific shaped and transparent objects, that move when illuminated with homogeneous light. In these particles, the refraction of the light leads to a momentum transfer, which then drives the active movement. Here, we show both in simulation and experiments that the production of such particles is possible and demonstrate the feasibility of this propulsion effect, while investigating different shapes. Our experiments show that breaking the shape-symmetry of the particles creates a refraction-based propulsion under homogeneous illumination. Subsequent simulations reveal that total reflection leads to the largest momentum transfer among all different geometries considered. Overall, our study introduces the proof-of-principle for refraction-propelled particles, which has the potential to benefit many fields of study including cellular behaviour, collective dynamics and the understanding of disease mechanisms.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_14918
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Self-propelled particles driven by light
Fischer, Jannis
Jurado, Alejandro
Betz, Timo
Biological Physics
Recent advances in the field of active soft matter promise a lot. Both, experimental advances and theoretical understanding point towards new material classes in reach, for example self-healing materials that might switch their properties from elastic to solid easily or switch their macroscopic shapes. All these materials require an active force to propel parts of themselves on the micrometer scale. While chemical fuels are often used to generate these active forces, applying energy in a simple and continuous way remains unsolved. Here we explore using light as such an energy source. Overall, generating active driven, self-propelled particles is hence not only of great interest but also a general challenge. Moreover, controlling such particles even within living tissue would open new worlds, for example to enable specific drug delivery or the design of micro-robots. One recently proposed method to establish light driven self propelled particles is to create specific shaped and transparent objects, that move when illuminated with homogeneous light. In these particles, the refraction of the light leads to a momentum transfer, which then drives the active movement. Here, we show both in simulation and experiments that the production of such particles is possible and demonstrate the feasibility of this propulsion effect, while investigating different shapes. Our experiments show that breaking the shape-symmetry of the particles creates a refraction-based propulsion under homogeneous illumination. Subsequent simulations reveal that total reflection leads to the largest momentum transfer among all different geometries considered. Overall, our study introduces the proof-of-principle for refraction-propelled particles, which has the potential to benefit many fields of study including cellular behaviour, collective dynamics and the understanding of disease mechanisms.
title Self-propelled particles driven by light
topic Biological Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.14918