Abstract

Demixing binary liquids is a ubiquitous transition explained using a well-established thermodynamic formalism that requires the equality of intensive thermodynamics parameters across phase boundaries. Demixing transitions also occur when binary fluid mixtures are driven away from equilibrium, but predicting and designing such out-of-equilibrium transitions remains a challenge. Here we study the liquid-liquid phase separation of attractive DNA nanostars driven away from equilibrium using a microtubule-based active fluid. We find that activity lowers the critical temperature and narrows the range of coexistence concentrations, but only in the presence of mechanical bonds between the liquid droplets and reconfiguring active fluid. Similar behaviours are observed in numerical simulations, suggesting that the activity suppression of the critical point is a generic feature of active liquid-liquid phase separation. Our work describes a versatile platform for building soft active materials with feedback control and providing an insight into self-organization in cell biology.

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