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1.
Nature ; 628(8008): 545-550, 2024 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38570688

RESUMEN

The pursuit of materials with enhanced functionality has led to the emergence of metamaterials-artificially engineered materials whose properties are determined by their structure rather than composition. Traditionally, the building blocks of metamaterials are arranged in fixed positions within a lattice structure1-19. However, recent research has revealed the potential of mixing disconnected building blocks in a fluidic medium20-27. Inspired by these recent advances, here we show that by mixing highly deformable spherical capsules into an incompressible fluid, we can realize a 'metafluid' with programmable compressibility, optical behaviour and viscosity. First, we experimentally and numerically demonstrate that the buckling of the shells endows the fluid with a highly nonlinear behaviour. Subsequently, we harness this behaviour to develop smart robotic systems, highly tunable logic gates and optical elements with switchable characteristics. Finally, we demonstrate that the collapse of the shells upon buckling leads to a large increase in the suspension viscosity in the laminar regime. As such, the proposed metafluid provides a promising platform for enhancing the functionality of existing fluidic devices by expanding the capabilities of the fluid itself.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 130(25): 258201, 2023 Jun 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37418710

RESUMEN

The statistics of noise emitted by ultrathin crumpled sheets is measured while they exhibit logarithmic relaxations under load. We find that the logarithmic relaxation advanced via a series of discrete, audible, micromechanical events that are log-Poisson distributed (i.e., the process becomes a Poisson process when time stamps are replaced by their logarithms). The analysis places constraints on the possible mechanisms underlying the glasslike slow relaxation and memory retention in these systems.

3.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ; 381(2244): 20220027, 2023 Apr 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36774957

RESUMEN

Recent research into the buckling load of thin shells has focused on local poking of the shell. In this approach, the shell is poked under load to extract its stability landscape, and a ridge tracking method is performed to estimate the buckling load of the shell. It is the current understanding that the stability landscape measures the local stability of the shell and, as a result, that the accuracy of ridge tracking greatly relies on the location of poking. Currently, there is no method that can predict where poking should be performed on an experimental system. Here, we examine the global response of thin shells to poking through the energy landscape. We present an experimental method for measuring the energy landscape of thin shells and demonstrate its application on a thin plate strip. We show that by analysing the dynamics of the shell in the energy landscape we can experimentally measure the buckling mode of the system, which gives the correct point of poking for accurate ridge tracking, and identify two kinds of buckling points. Finally, we propose how this approach can be applied to more complex systems such as thin cylinders. This article is part of the theme issue 'Probing and dynamics of shock sensitive shells'.

4.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ; 381(2244): 20220036, 2023 Apr 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36774953

RESUMEN

Geometric imperfections are understood to play an essential part in the buckling of a thin shell, but how multiple defects interact to control the onset of failure remains unclear. Here, we examine the failure of real cylindrical shells by experimentally poking soda cans with a large imparted dimple. By high-speed imaging of the can's surface, the initiation of buckling from axial loading is directly observed, revealing that larger dimples tend to set the initial buckling location. However, the influence of the shell's background geometric imperfections can still occasionally dominate, causing initiation to occur far from the dimple. In this situation, probing at the dimple leads to an over-prediction of the axial capacity. Using finite-element simulations, we understand our experimental results as a competition between the large dimple and the shell's inherent defect structure. In our simulations, we empirically observe a deformation-based criterion that connects the ideal poking location to the initiation site. This article is part of the theme issue 'Probing and dynamics of shock sensitive shells'.

5.
Small ; 18(18): e2108037, 2022 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35257493

RESUMEN

The electrochemical system is playing an increasingly important role in the advanced technology development for drinkable water and energy storage. While the binary electrolyte has been widely studied, such as the associated intriguing interfacial instabilities, multi-component electrolyte is by far less known. Here, based on the classic Cu|CuSO4 |Cu electrochemical system, the effect of supporting electrolyte is systematically investigated by highlighting the inert cations. In an annulus microfluidic device, the suppression of a previously known electro-osmotic instability and the emergence of an array of the remote electroconvection along the azimuthal direction is found. A distinctive inert-cation concentration valley propagates radially outward at a speed limited by the electromigration velocity. Remarkably, the simultaneous visualization of spatiotemporal evolution demonstrates the correlation of the concentration valley and electroconvection at a microscopic level. The underlying physical mechanism of their correlation is discussed, and the scaling analysis agrees with experiments. This work might inspire more future work on the multi-component electrolyte, such as for the suppression of interfacial hydrodynamic instability and mitigation of dendrite growth, with the technological implications for water treatment and energy storage in batteries.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 129(12): 128001, 2022 Sep 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36179205

RESUMEN

Fractures are a critical process in how materials wear, weaken, and fail, whose unpredictable behavior can have dire consequences. While the behavior of smooth cracks in ideal materials is well understood, it is assumed that for real, heterogeneous systems, fracture propagation is complex, generating rough fracture surfaces that are highly sensitive to specific details of the medium. Here we show how fracture roughness and material heterogeneity are inextricably connected via a simple framework. Studying hydraulic fractures in brittle hydrogels that have been supplemented with microbeads or glycerol to create controlled material heterogeneity, we show that the morphology of the crack surface depends solely on one parameter: the probability to perturb the front above a critical size to produce a steplike instability. This probability scales linearly with the number density, and with heterogeneity size to the 5/2 power. The ensuing behavior is universal and is captured by the 1D ballistic propagation and annihilation of steps along the singular fracture front.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 124(8): 085502, 2020 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32167345

RESUMEN

We simultaneously measure the static friction and the real area of contact between two solid bodies. These quantities are traditionally considered equivalent, and under static conditions both increase logarithmically in time, a phenomenon coined aging. Here we show that the frictional aging rate is determined by the combination of the aging rate of the real area of contact and two memory-erasure effects that occur when shear is changed (e.g., to measure static friction.) The application of a static shear load accelerates frictional aging while the aging rate of the real area of contact is unaffected. Moreover, a negative static shear-pulling instead of pushing-slows frictional aging, but similarly does not affect the aging of contacts. The origin of this shear effect on aging is geometrical. When shear load is increased, minute relative tilts between the two blocks prematurely erase interfacial memory prior to sliding, negating the effect of aging. Modifying the loading point of the interface eliminates these tilts and as a result frictional aging rate becomes insensitive to shear. We also identify a secondary memory-erasure effect that remains even when all tilts are eliminated and show that this effect can be leveraged to accelerate aging by cycling between two static shear loads.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(22): 225504, 2020 Nov 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33315464

RESUMEN

From soda cans to space rockets, thin-walled cylindrical shells are abundant, offering exceptional load carrying capacity at relatively low weight. However, the actual load at which any shell buckles and collapses is very sensitive to imperceptible defects and cannot be predicted, which challenges the of such structures. Consequently, probabilistic descriptions in terms of empirical design rules are used and designing reliable structures requires the use of conservative strength estimates. We introduce a nonlinear description where finite-amplitude perturbations trigger buckling. Drawing from the analogy between imperfect shells which buckle and imperfect pipe flow which becomes turbulent, we experimentally show that lateral probing of cylindrical shells reveals their strength nondestructively. A new ridge-tracking method is applied to commercial cylinders with a hole showing that when the location where buckling nucleates is known we can accurately predict the buckling load of each individual shell, within ±5%. Our study provides a new promising framework to understand shell buckling, and more generally, imperfection-sensitive instabilities.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 122(13): 135503, 2019 Apr 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31012638

RESUMEN

A key difficulty to understanding friction is that many physical mechanisms contribute simultaneously. Here we investigate third-body frictional dynamics in a model experimental system that eliminates first-body interaction, wear, and fracture, and concentrates on the elastic interaction between sliding blocks and third bodies. We simultaneously visualize the particle motion and measure the global shear force. By systematically increasing the number of foreign particles, we find that the frictional dissipation depends only on the size ratio between surface asperities and the loose particles, irrespective of the particle's size or the surface's roughness. When the particles are comparable in size to the surface features, friction increases linearly with the number of particles. For particles smaller than the surface features, friction grows sublinearly with the number of particles. Our findings suggest that matching the size of surface features to the size of potential contaminants may be a good strategy for reliable lubrication.

10.
Biophys J ; 114(6): 1490-1498, 2018 03 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29590605

RESUMEN

Bacterial biofilms are surface-attached microbial communities encased in self-produced extracellular polymeric substances. Here we demonstrate that during the development of Bacillus subtilis biofilms, matrix production is localized to an annular front propagating at the periphery and sporulation to a second front at a fixed distance at the interior. We show that within these fronts, cells switch off matrix production and transition to sporulation after a set time delay of ∼100 min. Correlation analyses of fluctuations in fluorescence reporter activity reveal that the fronts emerge from a pair of gene-expression waves of matrix production and sporulation. The localized expression waves travel across cells that are immobilized in the biofilm matrix in contrast to active cell migration or horizontal colony spreading. Our results suggest that front propagation arises via a local developmental program occurring at the level of individual bacterial cells, likely driven by nutrient depletion and metabolic by-product accumulation. A single-length scale and timescale couples the spatiotemporal propagation of both fronts throughout development. As a result, gene expression patterns within the advancing fronts collapse to self-similar expression profiles. Our findings highlight the key role of the localized cellular developmental program associated with the propagating front in describing biofilm growth.


Asunto(s)
Bacillus subtilis/fisiología , Biopelículas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Esporas Bacterianas/fisiología , Bacillus subtilis/genética , Regulación Bacteriana de la Expresión Génica , Factores de Tiempo
11.
Phys Rev Lett ; 120(22): 224101, 2018 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29906177

RESUMEN

We measure the static frictional resistance and the real area of contact between two solid blocks subjected to a normal load. We show that following a two-step change in the normal load the system exhibits nonmonotonic aging and memory effects, two hallmarks of glassy dynamics. These dynamics are strongly influenced by the discrete geometry of the frictional interface, characterized by the attachment and detachment of unique microcontacts. The results are in good agreement with a theoretical model we propose that incorporates this geometry into the framework recently used to describe Kovacs-like relaxation in glasses as well as thermal disordered systems. These results indicate that a frictional interface is a glassy system and strengthen the notion that nonmonotonic relaxation behavior is generic in such systems.

12.
Phys Rev Lett ; 119(22): 224101, 2017 Dec 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29286808

RESUMEN

We measure the response of cylindrical shells to poking and identify a stability landscape, which fully characterizes the stability of perfect shells and imperfect ones in the case where a single defect dominates. We show that the landscape of stability is independent of the loading protocol and the poker geometry. Our results suggest that the complex stability of shells reduces to a low dimensional description. Tracking ridges and valleys of this landscape defines a natural phase-space coordinates for describing the stability of shells.

13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 118(8): 085501, 2017 Feb 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28282188

RESUMEN

We observe nonmonotonic aging and memory effects, two hallmarks of glassy dynamics, in two disordered mechanical systems: crumpled thin sheets and elastic foams. Under fixed compression, both systems exhibit monotonic nonexponential relaxation. However, when after a certain waiting time the compression is partially reduced, both systems exhibit a nonmonotonic response: the normal force first increases over many minutes or even hours until reaching a peak value, and only then is relaxation resumed. The peak time scales linearly with the waiting time, indicating that these systems retain long-lasting memory of previous conditions. Our results and the measured scaling relations are in good agreement with a theoretical model recently used to describe observations of monotonic aging in several glassy systems, suggesting that the nonmonotonic behavior may be generic and that athermal systems can show genuine glassy behavior.

14.
Nature ; 463(7277): 76-9, 2010 Jan 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20054393

RESUMEN

The evolution of frictional strength has great fundamental and practical importance. Applications range from earthquake dynamics to hard-drive read/write cycles. Frictional strength is governed by the resistance to shear of the large ensemble of discrete contacts that forms the interface that separates two sliding bodies. An interface's overall strength is determined by both the real contact area and the contacts' shear strength. Whereas the average motion of large, slowly sliding bodies is well-described by empirical friction laws, interface strength is a dynamic entity that is inherently related to both fast processes such as detachment/re-attachment and the slow process of contact area rejuvenation. Here we show how frictional strength evolves from extremely short to long timescales, by continuous measurements of the concurrent local evolution of the real contact area and the corresponding interface motion (slip) from the first microseconds when contact detachment occurs to large (100-second) timescales. We identify four distinct and inter-related phases of evolution. First, all of the local contact area reduction occurs within a few microseconds, on the passage of a crack-like front. This is followed by the onset of rapid slip over a characteristic time, the value of which suggests a fracture-induced reduction of contact strength before any slip occurs. This rapid slip phase culminates with a sharp transition to slip at velocities an order of magnitude slower. At slip arrest, 'ageing' immediately commences as contact area increases on a characteristic timescale determined by the system's local memory of its effective contact time before slip arrest. We show how the singular logarithmic behaviour generally associated with ageing is cut off at short times. These results provide a comprehensive picture of how frictional strength evolves from the short times and rapid slip velocities at the onset of motion to ageing at the long times following slip arrest.

15.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ; 100(10): 4607-15, 2016 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27003268

RESUMEN

We develop an optical imaging technique for spatially and temporally tracking biofilm growth and the distribution of the main phenotypes of a Bacillus subtilis strain with a triple-fluorescent reporter for motility, matrix production, and sporulation. We develop a calibration procedure for determining the biofilm thickness from the transmission images, which is based on Beer-Lambert's law and involves cross-sectioning of biofilms. To obtain the phenotype distribution, we assume a linear relationship between the number of cells and their fluorescence and determine the best combination of calibration coefficients that matches the total number of cells for all three phenotypes and with the total number of cells from the transmission images. Based on this analysis, we resolve the composition of the biofilm in terms of motile, matrix-producing, sporulating cells and low-fluorescent materials which includes matrix and cells that are dead or have low fluorescent gene expression. We take advantage of the circular growth to make kymograph plots of all three phenotypes and the dominant phenotype in terms of radial distance and time. To visualize the nonlocal character of biofilm growth, we also make kymographs using the local colonization time. Our technique is suitable for real-time, noninvasive, quantitative studies of the growth and phenotype distribution of biofilms which are either exposed to different conditions such as biocides, nutrient depletion, dehydration, or waste accumulation.


Asunto(s)
Bacillus subtilis/crecimiento & desarrollo , Biopelículas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Imagen Óptica/métodos , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Medios de Cultivo/química , Fluorescencia , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Modelos Teóricos , Fenotipo
16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 112(13): 134501, 2014 Apr 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24745426

RESUMEN

We directly measure the rapid spreading dynamics succeeding the impact of a droplet of fluid on a solid, dry surface. Upon impact, the air separating the liquid from the solid surface fails to drain and wetting is delayed as the liquid rapidly spreads outwards over a nanometer thin film of air. We show that the approach of the spreading liquid front toward the surface is unstable and the spreading front lifts off away from the surface. Lift-off ensues well before the liquid contacts the surface, in contrast with prevailing paradigm where lift-off of the liquid is contingent on solid-liquid contact and the formation of a viscous boundary layer. Here we investigate the dynamics of liquid spreading over a thin film of air and its lift-off away from the surface over a large range of fluid viscosities and find that the lift-off instability is dependent on viscosity and occurs at a time that scales with the viscosity to the power of one half.

17.
Langmuir ; 30(41): 12119-23, 2014 Oct 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25227689

RESUMEN

The application of an electric field to a suspension of charged particles can lead to the formation of patterns due to electrohydrodynamic instabilities which remain poorly understood. We elucidate this behavior by visualizing the dynamics of charged carbon black particles suspended in a nonpolar solvent in response to an electric field. As the particles are transported across a microfluidic channel, an instability occurs in which the initially uniform, rapidly advancing particle front develops fingers. Furthermore, when the direction of the applied field is repeatedly switched, the particles localize into a remarkably well-defined periodic pattern which reflects an interplay between the fingering instability and particle diffusion.

18.
Mol Microbiol ; 86(2): 426-36, 2012 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22882172

RESUMEN

Many bacteria organize themselves into structurally complex communities known as biofilms in which the cells are held together by an extracellular matrix. In general, the amount of extracellular matrix is related to the robustness of the biofilm. Yet, the specific signals that regulate the synthesis of matrix remain poorly understood. Here we show that the matrix itself can be a cue that regulates the expression of the genes involved in matrix synthesis in Bacillus subtilis. The presence of the exopolysaccharide component of the matrix causes an increase in osmotic pressure that leads to an inhibition of matrix gene expression. We further show that non-specific changes in osmotic pressure also inhibit matrix gene expression and do so by activating the histidine kinase KinD. KinD, in turn, directs the phosphorylation of the master regulatory protein Spo0A, which at high levels represses matrix gene expression. Sensing a physical cue such as osmotic pressure, in addition to chemical cues, could be a strategy to non-specifically co-ordinate the behaviour of cells in communities composed of many different species.


Asunto(s)
Bacillus subtilis/química , Bacillus subtilis/genética , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Matriz Extracelular/genética , Regulación Bacteriana de la Expresión Génica , Bacillus subtilis/metabolismo , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Histidina Quinasa , Presión Osmótica , Fosforilación , Proteínas Quinasas , Factores de Transcripción
19.
Phys Rev E ; 107(5-2): 055003, 2023 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37328996

RESUMEN

The roughness of a fracture surface records a crack's complex path through a material and can affect the resultant frictional or fluid transport properties of the broken medium. For brittle fractures, some of the most prominent surface features are long, step-like discontinuities called step lines. In heterogeneous materials, the mean crack surface roughness created by these step lines is well captured by a simple, one-dimensional ballistic annihilation model, which assumes the creation of these steps is a random processes with a single probability that depends on the heterogeneity of the material, and that their destruction occurs via pairwise interactions. Here, through an exhaustive study of experimentally generated crack surfaces in brittle hydrogels, we examine step interactions and show that interaction outcomes depend on the geometry of the incoming steps. The rules that govern step interactions can be categorized into three unique classes and are fully described, providing a complete framework for predicting fracture roughness.

20.
Phys Rev Lett ; 108(7): 074503, 2012 Feb 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22401209

RESUMEN

The commonly accepted description of drops impacting on a surface typically ignores the essential role of the air that is trapped between the impacting drop and the surface. Here we describe a new imaging modality that is sensitive to the behavior right at the surface. We show that a very thin film of air, only a few tens of nanometers thick, remains trapped between the falling drop and the surface as the drop spreads. The thin film of air serves to lubricate the drop enabling the fluid to skate on the air film laterally outward at surprisingly high velocities, consistent with theoretical predictions. Eventually this thin film of air breaks down as the fluid wets the surface via a spinodal-like mechanism. Our results show that the dynamics of impacting drops are much more complex than previously thought, with a rich array of unexpected phenomena that require rethinking classic paradigms.

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