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Swinging, tumbling, and phase-lagging of multicomponent membranes in a shear flow

ORAL

Abstract

Biological membranes are host to proteins and molecules which can form domain-like structures, resulting in spatially-varying material properties such as bending rigidity and spontaneous curvature. Such membranes can exhibit intricate shapes at equilibrium, suggesting the possibility of rich dynamics when such a body is placed into a flow. Under the assumption of small deformations we develop a reduced order model to describe the full fluid-structure interaction between a viscous background shear flow and a vesicle with spatially varying bending stiffness and curvature, which is solved exactly to predict the membrane's time-dependent deformation and inclination angles. A critical ratio which links the flow rate, internal viscosity, and the gradient in material properties is derived, which identifies a rapid transition in the membrane dynamics: from a swinging motion (which includes tangential tank-treading) to a rigid body tumbling behavior, passing through a transition regime which features tumbling and periodic phase-lagging of the membrane material relative to the body's long axis. Full numerical simulations are used to probe the theoretical predictions, which appear valid even when studying substantially deformed membranes.

Publication: Swinging, tumbling, and phase-lagging of multicomponent membranes in a shear flow

Presenters

  • Prerna Gera

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

Authors

  • Prerna Gera

    University of Wisconsin - Madison

  • David Salac

    University at Buffalo, SUNY, University at Buffalo

  • Saverio E Spagnolie

    University of Wisconsin-Madison, University of Wisconsin - Madison