Spatiotemporal Optimal Control of an Extensile Active Nematic Suspension

ORAL

Abstract

Active nematic suspensions are self-driven fluids that exhibit rich spatiotemporal dynamics characterized by director field buckling, defect nucleation/annihilation and chaotic trajectories of those defects. Towards developing experimental methods for controlling these dynamics, we consider an optimal control problem which seeks to find the spatiotemporal pattern of active stress strength required to drive the system towards a desired director field configuration. As an exemplar, we consider an extensile active nematic fluid confined to a disk. In the absence of control, the system produces two topological defects that perpetually circulate. Optimal control identifies a time-varying active stress field that drives the defects to orbit in the opposite direction.

*We acknowledge support from NSF MRSEC, Bioinspired Soft Materials, DMR-1420382

Presenters

  • Michael M Norton

    • Center for Neural Engineering, Pennsylvania State University
    • Brandeis University

Authors

  • Michael M Norton

    • Center for Neural Engineering, Pennsylvania State University
    • Brandeis University
  • Piyush Grover

    • Mechanical Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Aparna Baskaran

    • Brandeis University
    • Physics, Brandeis University
    • Brandeis Univ
  • Michael Hagan

    • Brandeis University
    • Physics, Brandeis University
    • Department of Physics, Brandeis University
    • Brandeis Univ
  • Seth Fraden

    • Brandeis Univ
    • Physics, Brandeis University
    • Brandeis University