69 research outputs found
Mechanical and microscopic properties of the reversible plastic regime in a 2D jammed material
At the microscopic level, plastic flow of a jammed, disordered material
consists of a series of particle rearrangements that cannot be reversed by
subsequent deformation. An infinitesimal deformation of the same material has
no rearrangements. Yet between these limits, there may be a self-organized
plastic regime with rearrangements, but with no net change upon reversing a
deformation. We measure the oscillatory response of a jammed interfacial
material, and directly observe rearrangements that couple to bulk stress and
dissipate energy, but do not always give rise to global irreversibility.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. A supplemental PDF detailing methods, and movies
corresponding to Fig. 2(a, b, f), are availabl
Undulatory swimming in shear-thinning fluids: Experiments with C. elegans
The swimming behaviour of microorganisms can be strongly influenced by the
rheology of their fluid environment. In this manuscript, we experimentally
investigate the effects of shear-thinning viscosity on the swimming behaviour
of an undulatory swimmer, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Tracking methods
are used to measure the swimmer's kinematic data (including propulsion speed)
and velocity fields. We find that shear-thinning viscosity modifies the
velocity fields produced by the swimming nematode but does not modify the
nematode's speed and beating kinematics. Velocimetry data show significant
enhancement in local vorticity and circulation and an increase in fluid
velocity near the nematode's tail compared to Newtonian fluids of similar
effective viscosity. These findings are compared to recent theoretical and
numerical results
Particle diffusion in active fluids is non-monotonic in size
We experimentally investigate the effect of particle size on the motion of
passive polystyrene spheres in suspensions of Escherichia coli. Using particles
covering a range of sizes from 0.6 to 39 microns, we probe particle dynamics at
both short and long time scales. In all cases, the particles exhibit
super-diffusive ballistic behavior at short times before eventually
transitioning to diffusive behavior. Surprisingly, we find a regime in which
larger particles can diffuse faster than smaller particles: the particle
long-time effective diffusivity exhibits a peak in particle size, which is a
deviation from classical thermal diffusion. We also find that the active
contribution to particle diffusion is controlled by a dimensionless parameter,
the Peclet number. A minimal model qualitatively explains the existence of the
effective diffusivity peak and its dependence on bacterial concentration. Our
results have broad implications on characterizing active fluids using concepts
drawn from classical thermodynamics.Comment: 5 Figure
Undulatory Swimming in Viscoelastic Fluids
The effects of fluid elasticity on the swimming behavior of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans are experimentally investigated by tracking the nematode’s motion and measuring the corresponding velocity fields. We find that fluid elasticity hinders self-propulsion. Compared to Newtonian solutions, fluid elasticity leads to up to 35% slower propulsion. Furthermore, self-propulsion decreases as elastic stresses grow in magnitude in the fluid. This decrease in self-propulsion in viscoelastic fluids is related to the stretching of flexible molecules near hyperbolic points in the flow
Role of disorder in finite-amplitude shear of a 2D jammed material
A material's response to small but finite deformations can reveal the roots
of its response to much larger deformations. Here, we identify commonalities in
the responses of 2D soft jammed solids with different amounts of disorder. We
cyclically shear the materials while tracking their constituent particles, in
experiments that feature a stable population of repeated structural
relaxations. Using bidisperse particle sizes creates a more amorphous material,
while monodisperse sizes yield a more polycrystalline one. We find that the
materials' responses are very similar, both at the macroscopic, mechanical
level and in the microscopic motions of individual particles. However, both
locally and in bulk, crystalline arrangements of particles are stiffer (greater
elastic modulus) and less likely to rearrange. Our work supports the idea of a
common description for the responses of a wide array of materials
Yielding and microstructure in a 2D jammed material under shear deformation
The question of how a disordered material\u27s microstructure translates into macroscopic mechanical response is central to understanding and designing materials like pastes, foams and metallic glasses. Here, we examine a 2D soft jammed material under cyclic shear, imaging the structure of ∼5 × 104 particles. Below a certain strain amplitude, the structure becomes conserved at long times, while above, it continually rearranges. We identify the boundary between these regimes as a yield strain, defined without rheological measurement. Its value is consistent with a simultaneous but independent measurement of yielding by stress-controlled bulk rheometry. While there are virtually no irreversible rearrangements in the steady state below yielding, we find a largely stable population of plastic rearrangements that are reversed with each cycle. These results point to a microscopic view of mechanical properties under cyclic deformation
Fluid Elasticity Can Enable Propulsion at Low Reynolds Number
Conventionally, a microscopic particle that performs a reciprocal stroke
cannot move through its environment. This is because at small scales, the
response of simple Newtonian fluids is purely viscous and flows are
time-reversible. We show that by contrast, fluid elasticity enables propulsion
by reciprocal forcing that is otherwise impossible. We present experiments on
rigid objects actuated reciprocally in viscous fluids, demonstrating for the
first time a purely elastic propulsion set by the object's shape and boundary
conditions. We describe two different artificial "swimmers" that experimentally
realize this principle.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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