4 research outputs found
Self-organized dynamics and the transition to turbulence of confined active nematics
We study how confinement transforms the chaotic dynamics of bulk
microtubule-based active nematics into regular spatiotemporal patterns. For
weak confinements, multiple continuously nucleating and annihilating
topological defects self-organize into persistent circular flows of either
handedness. Increasing confinement strength leads to the emergence of distinct
dynamics, in which the slow periodic nucleation of topological defects at the
boundary is superimposed onto a fast procession of a pair of defects. A defect
pair migrates towards the confinement core over multiple rotation cycles, while
the associated nematic director field evolves from a distinct double spiral
towards a nearly circularly symmetric configuration. The collapse of the defect
orbits is punctuated by another boundary-localized nucleation event, that sets
up long-term doubly-periodic dynamics. Comparing experimental data to a
theoretical model of an active nematic, reveals that theory captures the fast
procession of a pair of defects, but not the slow spiral
transformation nor the periodic nucleation of defect pairs. Theory also fails
to predict the emergence of circular flows in the weak confinement regime. The
developed confinement methods are generalized to more complex geometries,
providing a robust microfluidic platform for rationally engineering
two-dimensional autonomous flows