Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session C61: Active Matter I
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 4, 2019
BCEC
Room: 258B
Sponsoring
Units:
GSOFT DBIO GSNP
Chair: Luca Giomi, Leiden University
Abstract: C61.00007 : Instability Driven Pattern Formation in Active Nematics
4:06 PM–4:18 PM
Presenter:
Ali Mozaffari
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago)
Authors:
Ali Mozaffari
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago)
Rui Zhang
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago)
Andrey Sokolov
(Materials Science Division, Argonne National Lab)
Alexey Snezhko
(Materials Science Division, Argonne National Lab)
Juan De Pablo
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago)
thermodynamic equilibrium that consists of self-driven units with long-range
orientational ordering. Our numerical simulation was inspired by the experimental
observation of the development of deformation patterns of
branched, radially elongated elastic bands of the director field in
living liquid crystals (suspension of self-propelled swimming bacteria in
bio-compatible lyotropic liquid crystal).
As a model system, we chose a suspension of elongated rods which exerts extensile active
stresses and we employed the theory of active nematodynamics to study the
spatiotemporal dynamics of this system. The interplay of activity induced spontaneous
flow which drives the system away from the minimum of the free energy, and the
orientational ordering of the liquid crystal give rise to rich dynamical behavior
over length scales much larger than the size of each individual active entity.
Continuum simulations of the active nematic explain how activity fueled
instabilities result in appreciable spatial inhomogeneities of the nematic
ordering, giving rise to the formation of alternating bands of opposite curvature.
Our study examines regimes beyond experimental limits providing important
insights into the origin of the observed pattern.
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