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Thermodynamic phases in two-dimensional active matter.

TLDR
In this paper, the authors show that two-dimensional self-propelled point particles with inverse power-law repulsions moving with a kinetic Monte Carlo algorithm without alignment interactions preserve all equilibrium phases up to very large activities.
Abstract
Active matter has been much studied for its intriguing properties such as collective motion, motility-induced phase separation and giant fluctuations. However, it has remained unclear how the states of active materials connect with the equilibrium phases. For two-dimensional systems, this is also because the understanding of the liquid, hexatic, and solid equilibrium phases and their phase transitions is recent. Here we show that two-dimensional self-propelled point particles with inverse-power-law repulsions moving with a kinetic Monte Carlo algorithm without alignment interactions preserve all equilibrium phases up to very large activities. Furthermore, at high activity within the liquid phase, a critical point opens up a gas–liquid motility-induced phase separation region. In our model, two-step melting and motility-induced phase separation are thus independent phenomena. We discuss the reasons for these findings to be common to a wide class of two-dimensional active systems. Adapting statistical physics tools to study active systems is challenging due to their non-equilibrium nature. Here the authors use simulations to present a phase diagram of a 2D active system, showing a two-step melting scenario far from equilibrium along with gas-liquid motility-induced phase separation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Computational models for active matter

TL;DR: This Review surveys computational models that describe a wide range of active systems, from synthetic microswimmers to animal herds, and compares various modelling approaches and numerical techniques to illuminate the innovations and challenges in understanding active matter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inertial effects of self-propelled particles: From active Brownian to active Langevin motion.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized recent developments of active particles with inertia (i.e., microflyers, hop-flies, or runners) for single particle properties and for collective effects of many particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical mechanics of active Ornstein-Uhlenbeck particles

TL;DR: This work describes both the instability mechanism leading to phase separation and the resulting phase coexistence of active Ornstein-Uhlenbeck particles, and probes how, in the stationary state, AOUPs depart from their thermal equilibrium limit by investigating the emergence of ratchet currents and entropy production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computational models for active matter

TL;DR: A variety of computational models have been developed to describe active matter at different length and time scales as mentioned in this paper, ranging from molecular motors and cytoskeletal filaments over artificial and biological swimmers on microscopic to groups of animals on macroscopic scales.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motility-Induced Microphase and Macrophase Separation in a Two-Dimensional Active Brownian Particle System.

TL;DR: A thorough study of the ordering kinetics of motility-induced phase separation in active Brownian particles in two dimensions is presented, and it is shown that it is generically accompanied by microphase separation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Novel Type of Phase Transition in a System of Self-Driven Particles

TL;DR: Numerical evidence is presented that this model results in a kinetic phase transition from no transport to finite net transport through spontaneous symmetry breaking of the rotational symmetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Absence of Ferromagnetism or Antiferromagnetism in One- or Two-Dimensional Isotropic Heisenberg Models

TL;DR: In this paper, it is rigorously proved that at any nonzero temperature, a one- or two-dimensional isotropic spin-S$ Heisenberg model with finite-range exchange interaction can be neither ferromagnetic nor antiferromagnetic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dislocation-mediated melting in two dimensions

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory of dislocation-mediated melting in two dimensions is described in detail, with an emphasis on results for triangular lattices on both smooth and periodic substrates, and the behavior of the specific heat, structure factor, and various elastic constants near these transitions is worked out.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of Two-Dimensional Melting

TL;DR: In this article, the consequences of dislocation-mediated two-dimensional melting are worked out for triangular lattices, and the critical behavior, as well as the effect of a periodic substrate, is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motility-Induced Phase Separation

TL;DR: A selective overview of the fast-developing field of MIPS, focusing on theory and effects, is given, which generally breaks down at higher order in gradients.
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