14 research outputs found
Dominance of extreme statistics in a prototype many-body Brownian ratchet
Many forms of cell motility rely on Brownian ratchet mechanisms that involve
multiple stochastic processes. We present a computational and theoretical study
of the nonequilibrium statistical dynamics of such a many-body ratchet, in the
specific form of a growing polymer gel that pushes a diffusing obstacle. We
find that oft-neglected correlations among constituent filaments impact
steady-state kinetics and significantly deplete the gel's density within
molecular distances of its leading edge. These behaviors are captured
quantitatively by a self-consistent theory for extreme fluctuations in
filaments' spatial distribution.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures + 20 pages of Supplementary Material with 2
figures. Updated to agree with published version; published as a
Communication in J. Chem. Phy
Unfolding the Sulcus
Sulci are localized furrows on the surface of soft materials that form by a
compression-induced instability. We unfold this instability by breaking its
natural scale and translation invariance, and compute a limiting bifurcation
diagram for sulcfication showing that it is a scale-free, sub-critical {\em
nonlinear} instability. In contrast with classical nucleation, sulcification is
{\em continuous}, occurs in purely elastic continua and is structurally stable
in the limit of vanishing surface energy. During loading, a sulcus nucleates at
a point with an upper critical strain and an essential singularity in the
linearized spectrum. On unloading, it quasi-statically shrinks to a point with
a lower critical strain, explained by breaking of scale symmetry. At
intermediate strains the system is linearly stable but nonlinearly unstable
with {\em no} energy barrier. Simple experiments confirm the existence of these
two critical strains.Comment: Main text with supporting appendix. Revised to agree with published
version. New result in the Supplementary Informatio
Curvature-induced stiffness and the spatial variation of wavelength in wrinkled sheets
Wrinkle patterns in compressed thin sheets are ubiquitous in nature and technology, from the furrows on our foreheads to crinkly plant leaves, from ripples on plastic-wrapped objects to the protein film on milk. The current understanding of an elementary descriptor of wrinkles—their wavelength—is restricted to deformations that are parallel, spatially uniform, and nearly planar. However, most naturally occurring wrinkles do not satisfy these stipulations. Here we present a scheme that quantitatively explains the wrinkle wavelength beyond such idealized situations. We propose a local law that incorporates both mechanical and geometrical effects on the spatial variation of wrinkle wavelength. Our experiments on thin polymer films provide strong evidence for its validity. Understanding how wavelength depends on the properties of the sheet and the underlying liquid or elastic subphase is crucial for applications where wrinkles are used to sculpt surface topography, to measure properties of the sheet, or to infer forces applied to a film
A Sheet on Deformable Sphere: Wrinklogami Patterns Suppress Curvature-Induced Delamination
The adhesion of a stiff film onto a curved substrate often generates elastic
stresses in the film that eventually give rise to its delamination. Here we
predict that delamination of very thin films can be dramatically suppressed
through tiny, smooth deformations of the substrate, dubbed here "wrinklogami",
that barely affect the macroscale topography. This "pro-lamination" effect
reflects a surprising capability of smooth wrinkles to suppress compression in
elastic films even when spherical or other doubly-curved topography is imposed,
in a similar fashion to origami folds that enable construction of curved
structures from an unstretchable paper. We show that the emergence of a
wrinklogami pattern signals a nontrivial isometry of the sheet to its planar,
undeformed state, in the doubly asymptotic limit of small thickness and weak
tensile load exerted by the adhesive substrate. We explain how such an
"asymptotic isometry" concept broadens the standard usage of isometries for
describing the response of elastic sheets to geomertric constraints and
mechanical loads.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. E, 25 pages, 9 figure
Recommended from our members
Curvature-induced stiffness and the spatial variation of wavelength in wrinkled sheets
Wrinkle patterns in compressed thin sheets are ubiquitous in nature and technology, from the furrows on our foreheads to crinkly plant leaves, from ripples on plastic-wrapped objects to the protein film on milk. The current understanding of an elementary descriptor of wrinkles--their wavelength--is restricted to deformations that are parallel, spatially uniform, and nearly planar. However, most naturally occurring wrinkles do not satisfy these stipulations. Here we present a scheme that quantitatively explains the wrinkle wavelength beyond such idealized situations. We propose a local law that incorporates both mechanical and geometrical effects on the spatial variation of wrinkle wavelength. Our experiments on thin polymer films provide strong evidence for its validity. Understanding how wavelength depends on the properties of the sheet and the underlying liquid or elastic subphase is crucial for applications where wrinkles are used to sculpt surface topography, to measure properties of the sheet, or to infer forces applied to a film