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Creators/Authors contains: "Hunter, Ian"

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  1. We report on the collective response of an assembly of chemomechanical Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) hydrogel beads. We first demonstrate that a single isolated spherical BZ hydrogel bead with a radius below a critical value does not oscillate, whereas an assembly of the same BZ hydrogel beads presents chemical oscillation. A BZ chemical model with an additional flux of chemicals out of the BZ hydrogel captures the experimentally observed transition from oxidized nonoscillating to oscillating BZ hydrogels and shows this transition is due to a flux of inhibitors out of the BZ hydrogel. The model also captures the role of neighboring BZ hydrogel beads in decreasing the critical size for an assembly of BZ hydrogel beads to oscillate. We finally leverage the quorum sensing behavior of the collective to trigger their chemomechanical oscillation and discuss how this collective effect can be used to enhance the oscillatory strain of these active BZ hydrogels. These findings could help guide the eventual fabrication of a swarm of autonomous, communicating, and motile hydrogels. 
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  2. In networks of nonlinear oscillators, symmetries place hard constraints on the system that can be exploited to predict universal dynamical features and steady states, providing a rare generic organizing principle for far-from-equilibrium systems. However, the robustness of this class of theories to symmetry-disrupting imperfections is untested in free-running (i.e., non-computer-controlled) systems. Here, we develop a model experimental reaction-diffusion network of chemical oscillators to test applications of the theory of dynamical systems with symmeries in the context of self-organizing systems relevant to biology and soft robotics. The network is a ring of four microreactors containing the oscillatory Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction coupled to nearest neighbors via diffusion. Assuming homogeneity across the oscillators, theory predicts four categories of stable spatiotemporal phase-locked periodic states and four categories of invariant manifolds that guide and structure transitions between phase-locked states. In our experiments, we observed that three of the four phase-locked states were displaced from their idealized positions and, in the ensemble of measurements, appeared as clusters of different shapes and sizes, and that one of the predicted states was absent. We also observed the predicted symmetry-derived synchronous clustered transients that occur when the dynamical trajectories coincide with invariant manifolds. Quantitative agreement between experiment and numerical simulations is found by accounting for the small amount of experimentally determined heterogeneity in intrinsic frequency. We further elucidate how different patterns of heterogeneity impact each attractor differently through a bifurcation analysis. We show that examining bifurcations along invariant manifolds provides a general framework for developing intuition about how chemical-specific dynamics interact with topology in the presence of heterogeneity that can be applied to other oscillators in other topologies. 
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  3. Sub-nanoliter volumes of the Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction are sealed in microfluidic devices made from polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). Bromine, which is a BZ reaction intermediate that participates in the inhibitory pathway of the reaction, is known to permeate into PDMS, and it has been suggested that PDMS and bromine can react ( J. Phys. Chem. A. 108, 2004, 1325-1332). We characterize the extent to which PDMS affects BZ oscillations by varying the volume of the PDMS surrounding the BZ reactors. We measure how the oscillation period varies with PDMS volume and compare with a theoretical reaction-diffusion model, concluding that bromine reacts with PDMS. We demonstrate that minimizing the amount of PDMS by making the samples as thin as possible maximizes the number of oscillations before the BZ reaction reaches equilibrium and ceases to oscillate. We also demonstrate that the deleterious effects of the PDMS-BZ interactions are somewhat mitigated by imposing constant chemical boundary conditions through using a light-sensitive catalyst, ruthenium, in combination with patterned illumination. Furthermore, we show that light can modulate the frequency and phase of the BZ oscillators contained in a PDMS matrix by 20-30%. 
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