Energy-Efficient Control of Interacting Microscopic Systems: When Longer Paths Save Energy
Abstract
We experimentally and theoretically study the thermodynamically optimal control of interacting multiple-particle systems, focusing on collections of colloidal particles individually confined in optical traps. We investigate protocols that transport the system between prescribed trap configurations within a fixed time in the most energy efficient way. For Markovian systems with conservative pairwise interactions, we establish a general result in the low-noise limit: optimal particle trajectories are linear in space and time, corresponding to steady straight-line motion, irrespective of the specific interaction potential, even for nonlinear forces. Thus, conservative interactions do not modify the geometry of the optimal paths. This property breaks down in the presence of strong noise or nonconservative interactions. For the paradigmatic case of hydrodynamic coupling, we demonstrate experimentally that optimal control can involve curved trajectories that significantly reduce the energetic cost by exploiting collectively generated fluid flows. The emergence of curved paths as optimal solutions highlights a fundamental distinction between non-interacting and interacting systems and reveals a cooperative mechanism for energy-efficient control.
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