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1.
Soft Matter ; 20(4): 762-772, 2024 Jan 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38165773

RESUMEN

We show that energy dissipation partition between a liquid and a solid controls the shape and stability of droplets sliding on viscoelastic gels. When both phases dissipate energy equally, droplet dynamics is similar to that on rigid solids. When the solid is the major contributor to dissipation, we observe an apparent contact angle hysteresis of viscoelastic origin. We find excellent agreement between our data and a non-linear model of the wetting of gels of our own that also indicates the presence of significant slip. Our work opens general questions on the dynamics of curved contact lines on compliant substrates.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(25): 258101, 2022 Jun 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35802423

RESUMEN

The mechanism by which living organisms seek optimal light conditions-phototaxis-is a fundamental process for motile photosynthetic microbes. It is involved in a broad array of natural processes and applications from bloom formation to the production of high-value chemicals in photobioreactors. Here, we show that a population of the model alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii exhibits a highly sensitive nonlinear response to light and demonstrate that the self-organization of cells in a heterogeneous environment becomes unstable as the result of a coupling between bioconvective flows and phototaxis.


Asunto(s)
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii , Fototaxis , Chlamydomonas reinhardtii/fisiología , Fotosíntesis , Fototaxis/fisiología , Suspensiones
3.
Soft Matter ; 18(24): 4565-4571, 2022 Jun 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35678311

RESUMEN

When immersed into a favourable solvent, many fibres, in particular vegetable, wood or animal fibres, will absorb liquid and swell. When a single drop of solvent is deposited, the fibre first locally swells at the drop position, then the liquid slowly diffuses within the fibre. We study the absorption dynamics of several drops placed on a fibre of fixed length. We show that during absorption, there is a swelling-induced global change in the tension of the fibre. If the drops are close enough to one another, this change induces the release of fluid out of the fibre (i.e. deswelling) in previously fluid-saturated regions. We identify the mechanisms underlying this transient localized fluid release, and identify the conditions for which it occurs in order to build a phase diagram as a function of the drops volume and distance, both experimentally and numerically using a linear poroelastic model.

4.
Eur Phys J E Soft Matter ; 45(6): 53, 2022 Jun 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35661937

RESUMEN

We measured the thickness of MDCK epithelia grown on substrates with a sinusoidal profile. We show that while at long wavelength the profile of the epithelium follows that of the substrate, at short wavelengths cells are thicker in valleys than on ridges. This is reminiscent of the so-called «healing length in the case of a thin liquid film wetting a rough solid substrate. We explore the ability of continuum mechanics models to account for these observations. Modeling the epithelium as a thin liquid film, with surface tension, does not fully account for the measurements. Neither does modeling the epithelium as a thin incompressible elastic film. On the contrary, the addition of an apical active stress gives satisfactory agreement with measurements, with one fitting parameter, the ratio between the active stress and the elastic modulus.


Asunto(s)
Epitelio , Módulo de Elasticidad , Tensión Superficial
5.
J R Soc Interface ; 17(168): 20200077, 2020 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32634367

RESUMEN

Massive foam formation in aquatic environments is a seasonal event that has a significant impact on the stability of marine ecosystems. Liquid foams are known to filter passive solid particles, with large particles remaining trapped by confinement in the network of liquid channels and small particles being freely advected by the gravity-driven flow. By contrast, the potential role of a similar retention effect on biologically active particles such as phytoplankton cells is still relatively unknown. To assess if phytoplankton cells are passively advected through a foam, the model unicellular motile alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (CR) was incorporated in a bio-compatible foam, and the number of cells escaping the foam at the bottom was measured in time. Comparing the escape dynamics of living and dead CR cells, we found that dead cells are totally advected by the liquid flow towards the bottom of the foam, as expected since the diameter of CR remains smaller than the typical foam channel diameter. By contrast, living motile CR cells escape the foam at a significantly lower rate: after 2 hours, up to 60% of the injected cells may remain blocked in the foam, while 95% of the initial liquid volume in the foam has been drained out of the foam. Microscopic observation of the swimming CR cells in a chamber mimicking the cross-section of foam internal channels revealed that swimming CR cells accumulate near channels corners. A theoretical analysis based on the probability density measurements in the micro chambers has shown that this trapping at the microscopic scale contributes to explain the macroscopic retention of the microswimmers in the foam. At the crossroads of distinct fields including marine ecology of planktonic organisms, fluid dynamics of active particles in a confined environment and the physics of foam, this work represents a significant step in the fundamental understanding of the ecological consequences of aquatic foams in water bodies.


Asunto(s)
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii , Microalgas , Ecosistema , Hidrodinámica , Natación
6.
Soft Matter ; 16(22): 5157-5176, 2020 Jun 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32458883

RESUMEN

The spreading of a liquid over a solid material is a key process in a wide range of applications. While this phenomenon is well understood when the solid is undeformable, its "soft" counterpart is still misunderstood and no consensus has been reached with regard to the physical mechanisms ruling the spreading of liquid drops over soft deformable materials. In this work we provide a theoretical framework, based on the nonlinear theory of discontinuities, to describe the behavior of a triple line on a soft material. We show that the contact line motion is opposed both by nonlinear localized capillary and visco-elastic forces. We give an explicit analytic formula relating the dynamic contact angle of a moving drop to its velocity for arbitrary rheology. We then specialize this formula to the experimentally relevant case of elastomers with the Chasset-Thirion (power-law) type of rheologies. The theoretical prediction is in very good agreement with experimental data, without any adjustable parameters. We then show that the nonlinear force balance presented in this work can also be used to recover classical models of wetting. Finally we provide predictions for the dynamic behavior of the yet largely unexplored case of a viscous drop spreading over a soft visco-elastic material and predict the emergence of a new form of apparent hysteresis.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 122(24): 248004, 2019 Jun 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31322373

RESUMEN

Understanding the interfacial properties of solids with their environment is a crucial problem in fundamental science and applications. Elastomers have challenged the scientific community in this respect, and a satisfying description is still missing. Here, we argue that the interfacial properties of elastomers, such as their wettability, can be understood with a nonlinear elastic model with the assumption of a strain-independent surface energy. We show that our model captures accurately available data on elastomer wettability and discuss its implications.

8.
Langmuir ; 34(41): 12244-12250, 2018 10 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30199255

RESUMEN

Silicone elastomers such as polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) are convenient materials routinely used in laboratories that combine ease of preparation, flexibility, transparency, and gas permeability. However, these elastomers are known to contain a small fraction of uncrosslinked low-molecular-weight oligomers, the effects of which are not completely understood, particularly when used in contact with liquids. Here, we show that triple lines involving air, water, and PDMS elastomers are responsible for the contamination of water-air interfaces by uncrosslinked silicone oligomers through a capillarity-induced extraction mechanism. We investigate both the case of static and moving contact lines and study various geometries ranging from partially immersed PDMS plates to water droplets or air bubbles deposited on PDMS plates, all involving air-water-elastomer triple lines. We demonstrate experimentally that the contamination timescale is strikingly shorter for moving contact lines than in the static case. Eventually, we propose a simple poroelastic model capturing the main features of contamination observed in experiments.

10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(8): 1748-1753, 2018 02 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29432172

RESUMEN

Gel layers bound to a rigid substrate are used in cell culture to control differentiation and migration and to lower the friction and tailor the wetting of solids. Their thickness, often considered a negligible parameter, affects cell mechanosensing or the shape of sessile droplets. Here, we show that the adjustment of coating thickness provides control over energy dissipation during the spreading of flowing matter on a gel layer. We combine experiments and theory to provide an analytical description of both the statics and the dynamics of the contact line between the gel, the liquid, and the surrounding atmosphere. We extract from this analysis a hitherto-unknown scaling law that predicts the dynamic contact angle between the three phases as a function of the properties of the coating and the velocity of the contact line. Finally, we show that droplets moving on vertical substrates coated with gel layers having linear thickness gradients drift toward regions of higher energy dissipation. Thus, thickness control opens the opportunity to design a priori the path followed by large droplets moving on gel-coated substrates. Our study shows that thickness is another parameter, besides surface energy and substrate mechanics, to tune the dynamics of liquid spreading and wetting on a compliant coating, with potential applications in dew collection and free-surface flow control.

11.
Soft Matter ; 14(1): 61-72, 2017 Dec 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29135008

RESUMEN

Elastocapillarity describes the deformations of soft materials by surface tensions and is involved in a broad range of applications, from microelectromechanical devices to cell patterning on soft surfaces. Although the vast majority of elastocapillarity experiments are performed on soft gels, because of their tunable mechanical properties, the theoretical interpretation of these data has been so far undertaken solely within the framework of linear elasticity, neglecting the porous nature of gels. We investigate in this work the deformation of a thick poroelastic layer with surface tension subjected to an arbitrary distribution of time-dependent axisymmetric surface forces. Following the derivation of a general analytical solution, we then focus on the specific problem of a liquid drop sitting on a soft poroelastic substrate. We investigate how the deformation and the solvent concentration field evolve in time for various droplet sizes. In particular, we show that the ridge height beneath the triple line grows logarithmically in time as the liquid migrates toward the ridge. We then study the relaxation of the ridge following the removal of the drop and show that the drop leaves long-lived footprints after removal which may affect surface and wetting properties of gel layers and also the motion of living cells on soft materials. Preliminary experiments performed with water droplets on soft PDMS gel layers are in excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions.

12.
Soft Matter ; 13(30): 5122-5129, 2017 Aug 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28650031

RESUMEN

We report an experimental study on the manipulation of colloidal particles in a drop sitting on a hydrogel. The manipulation is achieved by diffusiophoresis, which describes a directed motion of particles induced by solute gradients. By letting the solute concentrations for the drop and the hydrogel be different, we control the motion of particles in a stable suspension, which is otherwise difficult to achieve. We show that diffusiophoresis can cause the particles to move either toward or away from the liquid-air interface depending on the direction of the solute gradient and the surface charge of the particles. We measure the particle adsorption experimentally and rationalize the results with a one-dimensional numerical model. We show that diffusiophoretic motion is significant at the lengthscale of a drop deposited on a hydrogel, which suggests a simple method for the deposition of particles on hydrogels.

13.
PLoS One ; 10(3): e0120906, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25799424

RESUMEN

In response to natural or anthropocentric pollutions coupled to global climate changes, microorganisms from aquatic environments can suddenly accumulate on water surface. These dense suspensions, known as blooms, are harmful to ecosystems and significantly degrade the quality of water resources. In order to determine the physico-chemical parameters involved in their formation and quantitatively predict their appearance, we successfully reproduced irreversible cyanobacterial blooms in vitro. By combining chemical, biochemical and hydrodynamic evidences, we identify a mechanism, unrelated to the presence of internal gas vesicles, allowing the sudden collective upward migration in test tubes of several cyanobacterial strains (Microcystis aeruginosa PCC 7005, Microcystis aeruginosa PCC 7806 and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803). The final state consists in a foamy layer of biomass at the air-liquid interface, in which micro-organisms remain alive for weeks, the medium lying below being almost completely depleted of cyanobacteria. These "laboratory blooms" start with the aggregation of cells at high ionic force in cyanobacterial strains that produce anionic extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). Under appropriate conditions of nutrients and light intensity, the high photosynthetic activity within cell clusters leads the dissolved oxygen (DO) to supersaturate and to nucleate into bubbles. Trapped within the EPS, these bubbles grow until their buoyancy pulls the biomass towards the free surface. By investigating a wide range of spatially homogeneous environmental conditions (illumination, salinity, cell and nutrient concentration) we identify species-dependent thresholds and timescales for bloom formation. We conclude on the relevance of such results for cyanobacterial bloom formation in the environment and we propose an efficient method for biomass harvesting in bioreactors.


Asunto(s)
Eutrofización , Microcystis/crecimiento & desarrollo , Synechocystis/crecimiento & desarrollo , Biomasa , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Relación Dosis-Respuesta en la Radiación , Eutrofización/efectos de los fármacos , Eutrofización/efectos de la radiación , Espacio Extracelular/efectos de los fármacos , Espacio Extracelular/metabolismo , Espacio Extracelular/efectos de la radiación , Floculación , Hidrodinámica , Luz , Microcystis/citología , Microcystis/efectos de los fármacos , Microcystis/efectos de la radiación , Movimiento , Oxígeno/química , Sales (Química)/farmacología , Synechocystis/citología , Synechocystis/efectos de los fármacos , Synechocystis/efectos de la radiación , Factores de Tiempo
14.
Interface Focus ; 4(6): 20130051, 2014 Dec 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25485075

RESUMEN

A general feature of mature biofilms is their highly heterogeneous architecture that partitions the microbial city into sectors with specific micro-environments. To understand how this heterogeneity arises, we have investigated the formation of a microbial community of the model organism Bacillus subtilis. We first show that the growth of macroscopic colonies is inhibited by the accumulation of ammoniacal by-products. By constraining biofilms to grow approximately as two-dimensional layers, we then find that the bacteria which differentiate to produce extracellular polymeric substances form tightly packed bacterial chains. In addition to the process of cellular chaining, the biomass stickiness also strongly hinders the reorganization of cells within the biofilm. Based on these observations, we then write a biomechanical model for the growth of the biofilm where the cell density is constant and the physical mechanism responsible for the spreading of the biomass is the pressure generated by the division of the bacteria. Besides reproducing the velocity field of the biomass across the biofilm, the model predicts that, although bacteria divide everywhere in the biofilm, fluctuations in the growth rates of the bacteria lead to a coarsening of the growing bacterial layer. This process of kinetic roughening ultimately leads to the formation of a rough biofilm surface exhibiting self-similar properties. Experimental measurements of the biofilm texture confirm these predictions.

15.
Phys Rev Lett ; 107(1): 018103, 2011 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21797576

RESUMEN

Using swelling hydrogels, we study the evolution of a thin circular artificial tumor whose growth is confined at the periphery. When the volume of the outer proliferative ring increases, the tumor loses its initial symmetry and bifurcates towards an oscillatory shape. Depending on the geometrical and elastic parameters, we observe either a smooth large-wavelength undulation of the swelling layer or the formation of sharp creases at the free boundary. Our experimental results as well as previous observations from other studies are in very good agreement with a nonlinear poroelastic model.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias/patología , Dinámicas no Lineales , Humanos , Solventes
16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 101(6): 068101, 2008 Aug 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18764507

RESUMEN

Recently, much attention has been given to a noteworthy property of some soft tissues: their ability to grow. Many attempts have been made to model this behavior in biology, chemistry, and physics. Using the theory of finite elasticity, Rodriguez has postulated a multiplicative decomposition of the geometric deformation gradient into a growth-induced part and an elastic one needed to ensure compatibility of the body. In order to fully explore the consequences of this hypothesis, the equations describing thin elastic objects under finite growth are derived. Under appropriate scaling assumptions for the growth rates, the proposed model is of the Föppl-von Kármán type. As an illustration, the circumferential growth of a free hyperelastic disk is studied.


Asunto(s)
Crecimiento , Modelos Biológicos , Begomovirus/química , Begomovirus/crecimiento & desarrollo , Elasticidad , Hojas de la Planta/química , Hojas de la Planta/crecimiento & desarrollo , Estrés Mecánico
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