Relating the steady states of 3D dry active nematics to microscopic parameters through particle-based simulations
ORAL
Abstract
Active nematic liquid crystals exhibit a wide range of fascinating topological structures and dynamics, many of which are forbidden in equilibrium systems. Although it is well known that such systems form complex defect networks in 3D [1-4], the relationship between a system’s microscopic parameters and its coarse-grained macroscopic properties is unclear. In this work, we perform large-scale particle-based simulations of 3D dry active nematic filaments to understand the connection between microscopic simulation parameters, such as the bending stiffness and active force amplitude, and the emergent coarse-grained parameters. We find that the collective behaviors of this nonequilibrium system can be described by coarse-grained moduli analogous to an equilibrium system, but that activity significantly renormalizes the apparent material constants. The relative values of these effective moduli reflect the fact that the particle-scale energy injected by activity dissipates preferentially into certain modes. For example, the coarse-grained effective bending modulus can be understood to arise from a balance between the filaments’ intrinsic bending stiffness and activity-induced collisions.
*This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) DMR-1855914 and the Brandeis Center for Bioinspired Soft Materials, an NSF MRSEC (DMR-2011846). Computing resources were provided by the NSF XSEDE allocation TG-MCB090163 (Stampede and Expanse) and the Brandeis HPCC which is partially supported by the NSF through DMR-MRSEC 2011846 and OAC-1920147.
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Publication: [1] Shendruk et al., Phys. Rev. E, 2018
[2] Duclos et al., Science, 2020
[3] Binysh et al., Phys. Rev. Lett, 2020
[4] Jiang et al., PNAS, 2022
Presenters
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Yingyou Ma
- Brandeis University