Topological dynamics in active nematic liquid crystals

ORAL

Abstract

Recent years have seen a surge of interest in active materials, in which energy injected at the microscale gives rise to larger-scale coherent motion. One prominent example is an active 2D liquid crystal composed of microtubules in the nematic phase. The activity is generated by molecular motors that consume ATP to generate local shearing between the microtubules. The resulting 2D fluid flow exhibits self-generated mesoscale chaotic dynamics with a characteristic folding and stretching pattern. We analyse this dynamics in the context of chaotic advection, in which the fluid can be viewed as "stirred" by the topological defects in the nematic order parameter. We compute the topological entropy from the braiding of these defects and show that all of the entropy arises from the positive one-half defects; the negative one-half defects, which are also present, contribute nothing to the entropy. We also show that the topological entropy generated by this stirring can be understood as a direct consequence of the micro-scale stretching quantified by the Lyapunov exponent. Our work is based on experimental studies of particle tracking in the liquid crystal as well as direct imaging of the microtubule structure.

Presenters

  • Kevin A Mitchell

    • University of California, Merced
    • Univ of California - Merced

Authors

  • Kevin A Mitchell

    • University of California, Merced
    • Univ of California - Merced
  • Amanda J Tan

    • University of California, Merced
    • Univ of California - Merced
  • Eric J Roberts

    • Univ of California - Merced
  • Spencer A Smith

    • Mt Holyoke Coll
    • Mount Holyoke College
    • Mt. Holyoke College
  • Linda S Hirst

    • University of California, Merced
    • Univ of California - Merced