Mechanical basis for the morphology of fibrillar aggregates
ORAL
Abstract
The self-assembly of fibrillar aggregates is of importance in biology, biomedicine and materials science, yet understanding the range of possible shapes for these structures remains an open question. We propose a coarse-grained approach that averages over specific molecular details to suggest that the spatial complexity of self-assembling fibrillar structures is due to the competing effects of (the bending and twisting) elasticity of individual filaments and the adhesive interactions between them. We show that a theoretical framework accounting for this allows us to capture a number of diverse fibril morphologies observed in natural and synthetic systems, ranging from Filopodia to multi-walled carbon nanotubes, and leads to a phase diagram of possible fibril shapes. We also show how the extreme sensitivity of these morphologies can lead to spatially chaotic structures. Together, these results suggest a common mechanical basis for the micronscale fibril morphology as a function of the nanoscale mechanical properties.
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Presenters
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Thomas Michaels
Harvard University, Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard
Authors
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Thomas Michaels
Harvard University, Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard
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L Mahadevan
Harvard University, SEAS, Harvard University, Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard, John A. Paulson School Of Engineering And Applied Sciences, Harvard University, SEAS, Harvard, SEAS, Physics, OEB, Harvard University