Chuan-Hua Chen : Harnessing Surface Energy for Thermal Rectification and Resistive Sensing
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 106 Views )Surface energy can be harnessed to introduce new features essential to a variety of engineering systems, such as large-area scalability for phase-change thermal diodes and non-clogging apertures for resistive Coulter counting. In the first case, surface energy drives dropwise condensate to spontaneously jump on a superhydrophobic surface, and the self-propelled motion is exploited to create a planar and orientation-independent thermal diode. In the second case, surface tension is manipulated electrohydrodynamically to produce a cone-jet liquid bridge, which serves as a tunable and deformable aperture for resistive pulse sensing. This presentation will cover both fundamental interfacial phenomena and practical engineering applications.
Brian Utter : Jamming in Vibrated Granular Systems
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 116 Views )Granular materials exist all around us, from avalanches in nature to the mixing of pharmaceuticals, yet the behavior of these ``fluids'' is poorly understood. Their flow can be characterized by the continuous forming and breaking of a strong force network resisting flow. This jamming/unjamming behavior is typical of a variety of systems, including granular flows, and is influenced by factors such as grain packing fraction, applied shear stress, and the random kinetic energy of the particles. I'll present experiments on quasi-static shear and free-surface granular flows under the influence of external vibrations. By using photoelastic grains, we are able to measure both particle trajectories and the local force network in these 2D flows. We find through particle tracking that dense granular flow is composed of comparable contributions from the mean flow, affine, and non-affine deformations. During shear, sufficient external vibration weakens the strong force network and reduces the amount of flow driven by sidewalls. In a rotating drum geometry, large vibrations induce failure as might be expected, while small vibration leads to strengthening of the pile. The avalanching behavior is also strongly history dependent, as evident when the rotating drum is driven in an oscillatory motion, and we find that sufficient vibration erases the memory of the pile. These results point to the central role of the mobilization of friction in quasi-static granular flow.
David M. Walker : Contact Network Analysis of Granular Media
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 102 Views )The particles in a deforming assembly of a granular material continually rearrange themselves when subject to loading. This rearrangement can be usefully represented by an evolving (complex) contact network reflecting the changing connectivity. The tools of complex networks summarize the properties of these contact networks and changes in the physical material manifest in changes to these properties. We consider two different DEM systems, a biaxial compression test and a second system which allows for particle breakage, and discuss how different properties of the contact networks help to reveal different aspects of the materials'response to loading. (Joint work with Antoinette Tordesillas)
Ken Kamrin : Toward a predictive continuum model for dense granular flows
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 117 Views )The challenge of predicting velocity and stress fields in any flowing granular material has proven to be a difficult one, from both computational and theoretical perspectives. Indeed, researchers are still in search of the ``Navier-Stokes''-equivalent for flowing granular materials. Granular flows can be adequately predicted using grain-by-grain discrete element methods (DEM), but these approaches become computationally unrealistic for large bodies of material and long times. A robust continuum model, once identified, would have the practical benefit that it could be implemented at a meso-scale saving many orders of magnitude in computation time compared to DEM.
Here, we begin by synthesizing a 3D elasto-viscoplastic law for steady granular flow, merging an existing "frictional fluid" relation with a nonlinear granular elasticity relation to close the system. The flow rate vanishes within a frictional (Drucker-Prager) yield surface and the elastic response is based on a mean-field model generalizing Hertz's contact law. The resulting form is general, able to produce flow and stress predictions in any well-posed boundary value problem. We implement it using ABAQUS/Explicit finite-element package and run test simulations in multiple geometries. The solutions are shown to compare favorably against a number of experiments and DEM simulations.
While this relation appears to function well for rapid flows, experimental results can often differ from the predictions in regions of slower flows. We have been able to attribute many of these phenomena to nonlocal effects stemming from the finite-ness of the grain size. To correct this, we consider the addition of a simple nonlocal term to the rheology in a fashion similar to recent nonlocal flow models in the emulsions community. The results of this extended model are compared against many DEM steady-flow simulations in three different 2D geometries. Quantitative agreement is found for all geometries and over various geometrical/loading parameters. By natural extension, the nonlocal model is then converted to three dimensions with minimal changes, and is implemented numerically as a User-Element in the ABAQUS package. We show that a single calibration of the 3D model quantitatively predicts hundreds of experimental flows in different geometries, including, for the first time, the wide-shear zones observed in split-bottom cells, a geometry made infamous for resisting a theoretical treatment for almost a decade.
Hugo L. D. de S. Cavalcante : Digital Chaotic Circuits: part II - Characterization and Application
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 153 Views )We discuss the characterization of chaos displayed by continuous time digital circuits, both numerically and experimentally. Continuous models for physical systems with switch-like behavior are used to simulate those circuits and their coupling. The effect of perturbations in the coupling and synchronization is also studied experimentally and numerically.
Philippe H. Trinh : The role of exponentially small effects in the physical sciences
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 158 Views )Recently, the development of specialized techniques in mathematics known as
exponential asymptotics has led to the successful resolution of
long-standing problems in topics as varied as crystal growth, dislocations,
pattern formation, turbulence, thin film flow, and hydrodynamics. These
developments have emerged from the realization that in many such problems,
exponentially small effects can significantly change the solutions of the
underlying mathematical models.
In this talk, we will introduce the audience to the history, ideas, and
basic techniques of exponential asymptotics, with particular emphasis on
how to recognize when such approaches are necessary. We will discuss the
19th century struggles of the great Cambridge physicist G.G. Stokes to
better understand what is now known as the Stokes Phenomenon. We will then
show how this understanding would provide the key insight into resolving
two famous problems: the problem of modelling dendritic crystal growth, and
the Saffman-Taylor viscous fingering problem.
Our discussion will conclude with a glimpse of the present and future
applications of exponential asymptotics, notably within the context of
hydrodynamics and ship waves, and for the mathematical modelling of rupture
and singularity formation in fluid flows.
Peter Morse : Generic failure in granular packings: finding the relationship between shear and random forces
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 198 Views )Under shear, a jammed packing of particles will break in characteristic ways and transition between mechanically stable states. One can then ask whether the signatures of failure are specific to shear, or whether they are the same in more generic perturbations. Interestingly, recent mean-field calculations suggest that in infinite dimensions, the response of a system to global shear and random forces may be equivalent. Whether or not this is true in 2D or 3D systems remains an open question. Therefore, I've developed a method for driving 2D jammed packings of disks by quasti-static persistent random forces to demonstrate that the response is similar to what is observed in athermal quasi-static shear simulations. I will also comment on how we expect the similarities to break in finite dimensions and what these results might imply for active matter systems.
Andrew D Bragg : Lagrangian irreversibility and inversions in 3 and 2 dimensional turbulence
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 169 Views )Studying how small inertial particles suspended in turbulent flows
move relative to each other provides fundamental insights into their
transport, mixing and collisions. These insights are crucial for
tackling diverse problems ranging from droplet growth in warm clouds,
to planetesimal formation through collisional aggregation in turbulent
protoplanetary nebula. A deeper understanding of the relative motion
of the particles can be obtained by investigating both their
forward-in-time (FIT) and backward-in-time (BIT) dispersion. When FIT
and BIT dispersion are different it signifies irreversibility, and
since FIT and BIT dispersion are related to different problems,
understanding the irreversibility is of fundamental and practical
importance.
I will present new theoretical arguments and asymptotic predictions,
along with results from Direct Numerical Simulations (DNS) of the
governing equations, to show that inertial particle dispersion can be
very strongly irreversible in turbulence, with BIT being much faster
than FIT dispersion in 3-dimensional turbulence. The results also show
that inertial particles can disperse much faster than fluid
(interialess) particles. I will also present arguments, confirmed by
DNS results, that in 2-dimensional turbulence the nature of the
irreversibility and the direction of the particle energy fluxes can
invert when the particle inertia exceeds a certain threshold. These
results significantly advance our understanding of dispersion
problems, and lead to new capabilities for predicting the effect of
inertia on the rate at which particles spread out and mix together in
turbulence, and the rate at which they collide.
Luis Bonilla : Bifurcation theory of swarm formation
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 173 Views )In nature, insects, fish, birds and other animals flock. A simple two-dimensional model due to Vicsek et al treats them as self-propelled particles that move with constant speed and, at each time step, tend to align their velocities to an average of those of their neighbors except for an alignment noise (conformist rule). The distribution function of these active particles satisfies a kinetic equation. Flocking appears as a bifurcation from an uniform distribution of particles whose order parameter is the average of the directions of their velocities (polarization). This bifurcation is quite unusual: it is described by a system of partial differential equations that are hyperbolic on the short time scale and parabolic on a longer scale. Uniform solutions provide the usual diagram of a pitchfork bifurcation but disturbances about them obey the Klein-Gordon equation in the hyperbolic time scale. Then there are persistent oscillations with many incommensurate frequencies about the bifurcating solution, they produce a shift in the critical noise and resonate with a periodic forcing of the alignment rule. These predictions are confirmed by direct numerical simulations of the Vicsek model. In addition, if the active particles may choose with probability p at each time step to follow the conformist Vicsek rule or to align their velocity contrary or almost contrary to the average one, the bifurcations are of either period doubling or Hopf type and we find stable time dependent solutions. Numerical simulations demonstrate striking effects of alignment noise on the polarization order parameter: maximum polarization length is achieved at an optimal nonzero noise level. When contrarian compulsions are more likely than conformist ones, non-uniform polarized phases appear as the noise surpasses threshold.
Suliana Manley : Super-resolution imaging and single-molecule tracking, from viruses to chromatin
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 103 Views )We apply super-resolution imaging and single-molecule tracking to gain insight into how proteins assemble to form organized structures in cells. We describe several new tools that were developed to study diverse systems, from viruses to chromatin. The HIV structural protein Gag assembles to form spherical particles of radius ~70 nm. During the assembly process, the number of Gag proteins increases over several orders of magnitude, from a few at nucleation to thousands at completion. We demonstrated an approach that permits quantitative morphological and molecular counting analysis of hundreds of HIV-Gag clusters at the cellular plasma membrane, thus elucidating how different fluorescent labels can change the assembly of virions. Higher-order chromatin structure determines the degree of local DNA condensation, which in turn influences gene accessibility and therefore the expression of particular genes. We present two complementary approaches to address this limitation: super-resolution imaging of directly labeled DNA, and singlemolecule high density tracking of proteins participating in DNA packaging. For STORM imaging of DNA, we stained cells with the DNA-specific dye Picogreen, and obtained a ~5-fold improvement in resolution, resolving the sub-diffraction organization of chromatin structures in living cells. For single molecule tracking (sptPALM), we used small chemical tags to target synthetic dyes to specific protein targets, and visualized their dynamics3. The combination of DNA and protein superresolution imaging and single particle tracking will allow us to study chromatin organization in living cells, and rearrangements in response to exogenous signals.
Clarence W. Rowley : Low-order models for control of fluids
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 133 Views )The ability to effectively control a fluid would enable many exciting technological advances, such as the design of quieter, more efficient aircraft. Model-based feedback control is a particularly attractive approach, but the equations governing the fluid, although known, are typically too complex to apply standard tools for dynamical systems analysis or control synthesis. This talk addresses model reduction techniques, which are used to simplify existing models, to obtain low-order models tractable enough to be used for analysis and control, while retaining the essential physics. In particular, we will discuss two techniques: balanced truncation and Koopman modes. Balanced truncation is a well-known technique for model reduction of linear systems, with provable error bounds, but it is not computationally tractable for very large systems. We present an approximate version, called Balanced POD, that is computationally tractable, and produces much better models than traditional Proper Orthogonal Decomposition (POD), at least for the examples studied. Koopman modes are based on spectral analysis of the Koopman operator, an infinite-dimensional linear operator that describes the full nonlinear dynamics of a nonlinear system, and we show how the associated modes can elucidate coherent structures in examples including a jet in crossflow and the wake of a flat plate.
Stephen Teitel : Shear Banding, Discontinuous Shear Thickening, and Rheological Transitions in Athermally Sheared Frictionless Disks
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 177 Views )Simple models of classical particles, interacting via soft- or hard-core repulsive contact interactions, have been used to model a wide variety of granular and soft-matter materials, such as dry granular particles, foams, emulsions, non-Brownian suspensions, and colloids. Such materials display a variety of complex behaviors when in a state of steady shear driven flow. These include (i) Jamming: where the system transitions from a flowing liquid to a rigid but disordered solid as the particle packing increases; (ii) Shear Banding: where the system becomes spatially inhomogeneous, separating into distinct bands flowing at different sh ear strain rates; (iii) Discontinuous Shear Thickening: where the shear stress jumps discontinuously as the shear strain rate is increased. In this talk we will consider a simple numerical model of athermal soft-core interacting frictionless disks in steady state shear flow. We will show that the mechanism by which energy is dissipated plays a key role in determining the rheology of the system. For a model with a tangential viscous collisional dissipation, but no elastic friction, we will show that as the particle packing increases there is a sharp first order phase transition from a region of Bagnoldian rheology (stress ~ strain-rate^2) to a region of Newtonian rheology (stress ~ strain-rate), that takes place below the jamming transition. In a phase diagram of varying strain-rate and packing fraction (or strain-rate and pressure) this first order rheological phase transition manifests itself as a coexistence region, consisting of coexisting bands of Bagnoldian and Newtonian rheology in mechanical equilibrium with each other. Crossing this coexistence region by increasing the strain-rate at fixed packing, we find that discontinuous shear thickening can result if the strain-rate is varied too rapidly for the system to relax to the true shear-banded steady state. We thus demonstrate that the rheology of simply interacting sheared disks can be considerably more complex than previously realized, and our model suggests a simple mechanism for both the phenomena of shear banding and discontinuous shear thickening in spatially homogeneous systems, without the need to introduce elastic friction.
Heinrich M. Jaeger : Granular Fluids: Liquids with Vanishing Surface Tension?
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 139 Views )Qualitatively new behavior often emerges when large numbers of similar entities are interacting at high densities, no matter how simple the individual components. One prototypical example is granular matter such as fine dry sand, where individual grains are solids. In this talk I will discuss several striking phenomena, including the formation of jets and their break-up into droplets, where large ensembles of grains behave very much like a liquid, except that they do so without apparent surface tension.
John Cain : Stabilization of Periodic Wavetrains in Excitable Media
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 106 Views )Cardiac cells, like toilets, are excitable: Giving a sufficiently strong push to the handle of a quiescent toilet elicits a dramatic response (flush) followed by a gradual return to the resting state. Likewise, supplying a sufficiently strong electrical stimulus to a quiescent cardiac cell elicits a prolonged elevation of the membrane potential (an action potential).
Suppose that one end of an excitable fiber of cardiac cells is paced periodically. If the period is large, the generic response is a stable periodic wave train of the sort associated with normal, coordinated contraction of heart muscle tissue. Reducing the period (think "speeding up the heart rate") can cause the onset of an instability which can have devastating physiological consequences. Echebarria and Karma (Chaos, 2002) argued that if one attempts to stabilize the periodic wave train by using feedback control to perturb the pacing period, success can be achieved only within some small radius of the stimulus site. Those authors used a special case of the ETDAS control method that Dan Gauthier and Josh Socolar devised.
Here, I will offer an explanation as to WHY algorithms like ETDAS, applied locally, cannot achieve global results in this context. Then, I'll argue that it actually IS possible to stabilize the periodic wave train if the perturbations are chosen more carefully. While these findings may seem encouraging from an experimental or clinical standpoint, I will close by describing some recent work of Flavio Fenton which I believe is even more promising.
Amilcare Porporato : Random Jumps in Eco-Hydrology: Non-Gaussian Forcing in the Nonlinear Soil-Plant-Atmosphere System
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 159 Views )The terrestrial water balance is forced by highly intermittent and unpredictable pulses of rainfall. This in turn impacts several related hydrological and ecological processes, such as plant photosynthesis, soil biogeochemistry and has feedbacks on the local climate.
We treat the rainfall forcing at the daily time scale as a of marked (Poisson) point processes, which is then used the main driver of the stochastic soil water balance equation. We analyze the main nonlinearities in the soil water losses and discuss the probabilistic dynamics of soil water content as a function of soil-plant and vegetation characteristics. Crossing and mean-first-passage-time properties of the stochastic soil moisture process define the statistics of plant water stress, which in turn control plant dynamics, as shown in application to tree-grass coexistence in the Kalahari transect.
In the second part of this overview, we briefly illustrate: i) the propagation of soil moisture fluctuations through the nonlinear soil carbon and nitrogen cycles, ii) the possible emergence of persistence and preferential states in rainfall occurrence due to soil moisture feedback, and iii) the impact of inter-annual rainfall variability in connection to recent theory of superstatistics.
REFERENCES:
Rodriguez-Iturbe I. and A. Porporato, Ecohydrology of water controlled ecosystems: plants and soil moisture dynamics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. 2004.
Laio F., Porporato A., Ridolfi L., and Rodriguez-Iturbe I. (2001) Plants in water controlled ecosystems: Active role in hydrological processes and response to water stress. II. Probabilistic soil moisture dynamics. Advances in Water Research, 24, 707-723.
Porporato A., Laio F., Ridolfi L., and Rodriguez-Iturbe I. (2001) Plants in water controlled ecosystems: Active role in hydrological processes and response to water stress. III. Vegetation water stress. Advances in Water Research, 24, 725-744.
Porporato A., DOdorico P., Phase transitions driven by state-dependent Poisson noise, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92(11), 110601, 2004.
DOdorico P., Porporato A., Preferential states in soil moisture and climate dynamics, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA, 101(24), 8848-8851, 2004.
Manzoni S., Porporato A., DOdorico P. and I. Rodriguez-Iturbe. Soil nutrient cycles as a nonlinear dynamical system. Nonlin. Proc. in Geophys. 11, 589-598, 2004.
Porporato A., G. Vico, and P. Fay, Interannual hydroclimatic variability and Ecosystem Superstatistics. Geophys. Res. Lett., 33, L5402, 2006.
Daly, E., and A. Porporato, Inter-time jump statistics of state-dependent Poisson processes, Phys. Rev. E, 75, 011119, 2007.
Volkan Sevim : Modeling Gene Regulatory Networks and Evolution of Genetic Robustness
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 140 Views )Robustness to mutations and noise has been shown to be evolvable through stabilizing selection for optimal phenotypes in model gene regulatory networks. The ability to evolve robust mutants is known to depend on the network architecture. How do the dynamical properties and state space structures of these networks with high and low robustness differ? Does selection operate on the global dynamical behavior of the networks? What kind of state space structures are favored by the selection? Using an extensive statistical analysis of state spaces of these model networks and damage-propagation analysis, I show that the change in their dynamical properties due to stabilizing selection for optimal phenotypes is minor. In agreement with recent studies, robustness to noise evolves along with robustness to mutations. Most notably, the networks that are most robust to both mutations and noise are highly chaotic. Certain properties of chaotic systems, such as being able to produce large attractor basins, seem to be useful to maintain a stable gene expression pattern.
Katia Koelle : Exploration, innovation, and selective sweeps in the ecology
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 140 Views )For many biological systems, the timescale at which ecological interactions occur is much shorter than the timescale at which evolutionary changes occur. For rapidly evolving pathogens such as influenza, however, this is not the case; influenza researchers therefore need to understand both the ecological interactions between the host and the pathogen and the virus?s evolutionary changes in order to ultimately control the disease in humans. Recently, a study looking at the evolutionary patterns of influenza showed that, while the virus?s genetic evolution occurred gradually, its antigenic evolution occurred in a punctuated manner. (Genetic evolution refers to how the virus?s nucleotides change over time; antigenic evolution refers to how the virus changes over time with respect to how our immune system recognizes it.) Previous research from our group hypothesized that these differences in evolutionary patterns could be explained by the presence of /neutral networks/ in the virus?s genotype space: networks of sequences that differ genetically from one another but fold into the same protein conformation and thereby share antigenic properties. Here, I will present a simple epidemiological model that implicitly incorporates these neutral networks. I show that this model can reproduce (1) the seasonal and interannual outbreak patterns of influenza, (2) the quantitative patterns of influenza?s antigenic evolution, and (3) the patterns of the virus?s genetic evolution, including its characteristic phylogenetic tree. I end with how this model may be useful in understanding patterns of viral diversity in other host species (e.g., avian and equine hosts).
Eric Weeks : Colloidal liquids, crystals, and glasses
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 133 Views )My group studies colloidal suspensions, which are solid micron-sized particles in a liquid. We use an optical confocal microscope to view the motion of these colloidal particles in three dimensions. In some experiments, these particles arrange into a crystalline lattice, and thus the sample is analogous to a traditional solid. We study the interface between colloidal crystals and colloidal liquids, and find that this interface is quite sharply defined. In other experiments, the sample is analogous to a glass, with particles randomly packed together. The particles correspond to individual molecules in a traditional glass, and the sample exhibits glassy behavior when the particle concentration is high. This allows us to directly study the microscopic behavior responsible for the macroscopic viscosity divergence of glasses.
Changhui Tan : Self-organized dynamics: aggregation and flocking
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 164 Views )Self-organized behaviors are commonly observed in nature and human societies, such as bird flocks, fish swarms and human crowds. In this talk, I will present some celebrated mathematical models, with simple small-scale interactions which lead to the emergence of global behaviors: aggregation and flocking. I will discuss the models in different scales: from microscopic agent-based dynamics, through kinetic mean-field descriptions, to macroscopic fluid systems. In particular, the macroscopic models can be viewed as compressible Euler equations with nonlocal interactions. I will show some recent results on the global wellposedness theory of the systems, large time behaviors, and interesting connections to some classical equations in fluid mechanics.
David Barton : Numerical continuation for investigating nonlinear systems: from model to experiment
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 97 Views )Numerical continuation is a tool for investigating the bifurcation structure of a nonlinear dynamical system with respect to the system parameters. It is most often used to "carve up" parameter space into regions of qualitatively different behaviour by finding and tracking bifurcations (e.g., Hopf bifurcations) as the system parameters change. This talk will give an introduction to the theory behind numerical continuation and go on to discuss recent developments in the field.
Particular attention will be paid to numerical continuation of systems with non-smoothness, motivated by the example of intermittent contacts in a model of orthogonal cutting (turning). Rich dynamical behaviour is present in this model due to the presence of a grazing bifurcation which denotes the transition point from constant contact of the cutting tool with the workpiece to intermittent contact. Using numerical continuation it is possible to elucidate the full bifurcation structure of the system, something that would be extremely difficult with other methods.
Finally, numerical continuation will be demonstrated as applied to a physical experiment (so-called control-based continuation): a nonlinear energy harvesting device. Numerical continuation in this context allows the investigation of a physical device without prior knowledge of a model. Both stable and unstable motions can be investigated and bifurcations found directly. As such these investigations may aid in establishing what an appropriate mathematical model could be.
Eric DeGiuli : Unified Theory of Inertial Granular Flows and Non-Brownian Suspensions
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 158 Views )The rheology of dense flows of hard particles is singular near the jamming threshold where flow ceases, both for aerial granular flows dominated by inertia, and for over-damped suspensions. At the same time, the length scale characterizing velocity correlations appears to diverge at jamming. We introduce a theoretical framework that proposes a potentially complete scaling description of stationary flows of frictionless particles. We compare our predictions with the empirical literature, as well as with new numerical data. Overall we find a very good agreement between theory and observations. Finally, we use simulations of frictional inertial flow to outline the regime of the phase diagram where the theory holds, and show where friction adds new physics.
Itai Cohen : Q: How many folded angels can dance on the head of pin? A: 22+/-5
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 155 Views )For centuries, origami, the Japanese art of paper folding, has been a powerful technique for transforming two dimensional sheets into beautiful three dimensional sculptures. Recently, origami has made its foray into a new realm, that of physics and engineering, where it has been revolutionizing our concept of materials design. In this talk I will describe the new design principles we are uncovering for determining the shape, mechanics, and transformations of origami structures along with their usefulness in areas as diverse as solar sail design, architecture, and even fashion. Arguably however, the greatest strength of this new paradigm is the fact that origami is intrinsically scalable. Thus sculptures built at one size can be shrunk down smaller and smaller. This begs the question: what is the smallest fold one can make? Or in other words, how many folded angels can dance on the head of a pin? The rest of this talk will take a deep dive into how origami has been marching smaller and smaller in size. From folding by hand, to self-folding through shape memory alloys and even folding via polymer layers, I will argue that the ultimate limit for scaling down origami is set by folding a sheet of atomic dimensions. I will conclude by showing this vision: realized in the folds of a single sheet of graphene.
Emanuela Del Gado : Gelation and densification of cement hydrates: a soft matter in construction
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 174 Views )5-8 % of the global human CO2 production comes from the production of
cement, concrete main binder. The material strength emerges through the
development, once in contact with water, of calcium-silicate-hydrate (C-S-H)
gels that literally glue together the final compound. Current industrial
research aims at exploring alternative and more environmentally friendly
chemical compositions while enhancing rheology and mechanics, to overcome
the many technological challenges and guarantee concrete standards.
Identifying the fundamental mechanisms that control the gel properties at
the early stages of hydration and setting is crucial, although challenging,
because of far-from-equilibrium conditions, closely intertwined to the
evolution of the chemical environment, that are a hallmark of cement
hydration.
I will discuss a recently developed statistical physics approach, which
allows us to investigate the gel formation under the out-of-equilibrium
conditions typical of cement hydration and the role of the nano-scale
structure in C-S-H mechanics upon hardening. Our approach, combining Monte
Carlo and Molecular Dynamics simulations, unveils for the first time how
some distinctive features of the kinetics of cement hydration can be related
to the nano-scale effective interactions and to the changes in the
morphology of the gels. The novel emerging picture is that the changes of
the physico-chemical environment, which dictate the evolution of the
effective interactions, specifically favor the gel formation and its
continuous densification. Our findings provide new handles to design
properties of this complex material and an extensive comparison of numerical
findings for the hardened paste with experiments ranging from SANS, SEM,
adsorption/desorption of N2 and water to nano-indentation provide new,
fundamental insights into the microscopic origin of the properties measured.
K. Ioannidou, R.J.-M. Pellenq and E. Del Gado Controlling local packing and
growth in calcium-silicate-hydrate gels
E. Del Gado, K. Ioannidou, E. Masoero, A. Baronnet, R. J.-M. Pellenq, F. J.
Ulm and S. Yip, A soft matter in construction - Statistical physics approachfor formation and mechanics of C--S--H gels in cement,
K. Ioannidou, K.J. Krakowiak, M. Bauchy, C.G. Hoover, E. Masoero, S. Yip,
F.-J. Ulm, P. Levitz, R.J.-M. Pellenq and E. Del Gado, The mesoscale textureof cement hydrates
K. Ioannidou, M. Kanduc, L. Li, D. Frenkel, J. Dobnikar and E. Del Gado,
The crucial effect of early-stage gelation on the mechanical properties of
cement hydrates , under review
Holger Stark : Active motion: Understanding the nonequilibrium
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 160 Views )Active motion of microorganisms or artificial microswimmers in a fluid at low Reynolds number is an appealing subject which has attracted much attention recently. Since these swimmers move constantly in nonequilibrium, they give rise to novel phenomena which, in particular, occur when external fields are applied or when they move collectively.
The talk reviews three situations where active motion manifests itself. First, a swimmer under Poiseuille flow shows nonlinear dynamics reminiscent of the nonlinear pendulum. Bounding walls introduce "dissipation" [1] and an elliptical crosssection of the microchannel leads to chaotic motion. Secondly, I discuss the collective motion of model swimmers, so-called squirmers, in a quasi 2D geometry by means of multi-particle collision dynamics. This is a particle based method to solve the Navier-Stokes equations and helps to elucidate the role of hydrodynamics in collective phenomena. Indeed, we find gas-like and cluster phases as well as phase separation which is strongly influenced by hydrodynamic near-field interactions and the swimmer type. Thirdly, I discuss dynamic clustering of active or self-propelling colloids that interact by diffusiophoresis reminiscent of chemotaxis in bacterial systems.
[1] A. Zoettl and H. Stark, Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 218104 (2012).
Matthieu Wyart : Discontinuous shear thickening without inertia in dense non-Brownian suspensions
- Nonlinear and Complex Systems ( 118 Views )A consensus is emerging that discontinuous shear thickening (DST) in dense suspensions marks a transition from a flow state where particles remain well separated by lubrication layers, to one dominated by frictional contacts. We show here that reasonable assumptions about contact proliferation predict two distinct types of DST in the absence of inertia. The first occurs at densities above the jamming point of frictional particles; here the thickened state is completely jammed and (unless particles deform) cannot flow without inhomogeneity or fracture. The second regime shows strain-rate hysteresis and arises at somewhat lower densities where the thickened phase flows smoothly. DST is predicted to arise when finite-range repulsions defer contact formation until a characteristic stress level is exceeded.