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Bryan Robertson

Researcher at University of Toronto

Publications -  7
Citations -  216

Bryan Robertson is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Langevin dynamics & Molecular motor. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 190 citations.

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Chemistry in Motion: Tiny Synthetic Motors

TL;DR: How synthetic motors that operate by self-diffusiophoresis make use of a self-generated concentration gradient to drive motor motion is described, which addresses the question: how small can motors be and still exhibit effects due to propulsion, even if only to enhance diffusion.
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Chemistry in Motion: Tiny Synthetic Motors

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe how synthetic motors that operate by self-diffusiophoresis make use of a self-generated concentration gradient to drive motor motion and demonstrate the properties of the dynamics of chemically powered motors.
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Synthetic Nanomotors: Working Together through Chemistry

TL;DR: Through simulations and theory, this Account describes how active matter made from chemically powered nanomotors moving in simple and more complicated media can form different dynamical structures that are strongly influenced by interactions arising from cooperative chemical reactions on the motor surfaces.
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Collective orientational dynamics of pinned chemically-propelled nanorotors

TL;DR: It is shown that different rotor configurations with a high degree of correlation exist and their forms depend on the nature of the fluid-rotor interactions, indicating that hydrodynamic coupling, while present, plays a lesser role in determining the collective rotor dynamics.
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Nanomotor dynamics in a chemically oscillating medium.

TL;DR: Using molecular simulation and mean-field theory, this paper describes some of the new features that arise when a chemically powered nanomotor, operating through a diffusiophoretic mechanism, moves in an environment that supports an oscillatory chemical reaction network.