Active boundary layers in confined active nematics
ORAL
Abstract
Boundary layers play a central role in fluid dynamics and in soft material science. They are regions whose extent is much smaller than any typical system size, yet, the interfacial transport processes associated with localized profiles of scalar fields, such as pressure or ionic charge density control the distant dynamics. In conventional liquid crystals, molecular interactions in this region determine the equilibrium orientational field of the passive material. However, the role of boundaries in active liquid crystals has just begun to be studied.
Here, we work with the well-known kinesin/tubulin active nematic under confinement and show that the self-sustained flows can develop active boundary layers that topologically polarize the confining walls and determine the bulk flows. Differently from the polarization by electric charges that drive electrokinetic phenomena and stabilize colloidal suspensions, here the boundary is populated by distortions of the orientational field, or topological defects, of identical negative charge. In contrast to their bulk counterparts both in passive and active liquid crystals, defects in the active boundary layer feature the ability to merge between like-sign distortions and exhibit collective dynamics that are reminiscent of a one-dimensional Kuramoto-Sivashinsky-like description of spatiotemporal chaos.
Here, we work with the well-known kinesin/tubulin active nematic under confinement and show that the self-sustained flows can develop active boundary layers that topologically polarize the confining walls and determine the bulk flows. Differently from the polarization by electric charges that drive electrokinetic phenomena and stabilize colloidal suspensions, here the boundary is populated by distortions of the orientational field, or topological defects, of identical negative charge. In contrast to their bulk counterparts both in passive and active liquid crystals, defects in the active boundary layer feature the ability to merge between like-sign distortions and exhibit collective dynamics that are reminiscent of a one-dimensional Kuramoto-Sivashinsky-like description of spatiotemporal chaos.
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Publication: Preprint https://arxiv.org/abs/2012.02740 (accepted in Nature Communications).
Presenters
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Jordi Ignés-Mullol
University of Barcelona
Authors
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Jordi Ignés-Mullol
University of Barcelona
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Jérôme Hardoüin
University of Barcelona
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Claire Doré
ESPCI Paris
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Justine Laurent
ESPCI Paris
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Teresa Lopez-Leon
CNRS - Sorbonne University
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Jordi Ignés-Mullol
University of Barcelona