locomotion
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New prospects in shape morphing sheets: unexplored pathways, 4D printing, and autonomous actuation
Living organisms have mastered the dynamic control of stresses within sheets to induce shape transformation and locomotion. For instance, the spatiotemporal pattern of action potential in a heart yields a dynamical stress field leading to shape changes and biological function. Such structures inspired the development of theoretical tools and responsive materials alike. Yet, present attempts to mimic their rich dynamics and phenomenology in autonomous synthetic matter are still very limited. In this talk, I will present several complementing innovations toward this goal: novel shaping mechanisms that were overlooked by previous research, new fabrication techniques for programmable matter via 4D printing of gel structures, and most prominently, the first autonomous shape morphing membranes. The dynamical control over the geometry of the material is a prevalent theme in all of these achievements. In particular, the latter system demonstrates localized deformations, induced by a pattern-forming chemical reaction, that prescribe the patterns of curvature, leading to global shape evolution. Together, these developments present a route for modeling and producing fully autonomous soft membranes mimicking some of the locomotive capabilities of living organisms.
Locomotion of Helicobacter pylori: Cell geometry and active confinement
Microorganism locomotion in viscoelastic fluids
Many microorganisms and cells function in complex (non-Newtonian) fluids, which are mixtures of different materials and exhibit both viscous and elastic stresses. For example, mammalian sperm swim through cervical mucus on their journey through the female reproductive tract, and they must penetrate the viscoelastic gel outside the ovum to fertilize. In micro-scale swimming the dynamics emerge from the coupled interactions between the complex rheology of the surrounding media and the passive and active body dynamics of the swimmer. We use computational models of swimmers in viscoelastic fluids to investigate and provide mechanistic explanations for emergent swimming behaviors. I will discuss how flexible filaments (such as flagella) can store energy from a viscoelastic fluid to gain stroke boosts due to fluid elasticity. I will also describe 3D simulations of model organisms such as C. Reinhardtii and mammalian sperm, where we use experimentally measured stroke data to separate naturally coupled stroke and fluid effects. We explore why strokes that are adapted to Newtonian fluid environments might not do well in viscoelastic environments.
Functional consequences of microscopic skin features on snake locomotion
Hydrodynamic shape of microorganisms: Generalised Jeffery orbits
'Shape' of microorganisms are diverse. However, we sometimes approximate them as a sphere or a spheroid when we mathematically model the hydrodynamics of motile and non-motile cells. Such a geometrical simplification can be theoretically validated for motions in a linear background flow, since the dynamics, known as the Jeffery orbit, only contain a single geometric parameter, called the Bretherton constant. In this talk, we generalise the Jeffery equations for a chiral axisymmetric object using the low-Reynolds-number hydrokinetic symmetry and then demonstrate that the dynamics of a certain type of chiral object in a fluid flow are characterised by a new chiral parameter in addition to the Bretherton constant. We also discuss how the generalised Jeffery orbits are applied to biased locomotion of bacteria in a bulk shear flow and we will share the idea of hydrodynamic `shape' of microorganisms to simplify the description of their dynamics.
Driving Soft Materials with Magnetic Fields
Magnetic fields exert controllable forces that generate microscopic actuation and locomotion in soft materials with superparamagnetic or ferromagnetic components. I will describe the shape changes and materials parameters required to drive and direct matter including filaments, membranes and hydrogels with magnetic components using precessing magnetic fields
Multistable structures - from deployable structures to robots
Multistable structures can reversibly change between multiple stable configurations when a sufficient energetic input is provided. While originally the field focused on understanding what governs the snapping, more recently it has been shown that these systems also provide a powerful platform to design a wide range of smart structures. In this talk, I will first show that pressure-deployable origami structures characterized by two stable configurations provide opportunities for a new generation of large-scale inflatable structures that lock in place after deployment and provide a robust enclosure through their rigid faces. Then, I will demonstrate that the propagation of transition waves in a bistable one-dimensional linkage can be exploited as a robust mechanism to realize structures that can be quickly deployed. Finally, while in the first two examples multistability is harnessed to realize deployable architectures, I will demonstrate that bistable building blocks can also be exploited to design crawling and jumping robots. Unlike previously proposed robots that require complex input control of multiple actuators, a simple, slow input signal suffices to make our system move, as all features required for locomotion are embedded into the architecture of the building blocks.
Surprises in self-deforming self-propelling systems
From slithering snakes, to entangling robots, self-deforming (shape changing) active systems display surprising dynamics. This is particularly true when such systems interact with environments or other agents to generate self-propulsion (movement). In this talk, I will discuss a few projects from my group illustrating unexpected effects in individual and collectives of self-deformers. For example, snakes and snake-like robots mechanically “diffract” from fixed environmental heterogeneities, collections of smart-active robots (smarticles) can locomote (and phototax) as a collective despite individual immobility, and geometrically actively entangling ensembles of blackworms and robots can self-propel as a unit to thermo or phototax without centralized control.
locomotion coverage
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