Soft Materials
soft materials
Making a Mesh of Things: Using Network Models to Understand the Mechanics of Heterogeneous Tissues
Networks of stiff biopolymers are an omnipresent structural motif in cells and tissues. A prominent modeling framework for describing biopolymer network mechanics is rigidity percolation theory. This theory describes model networks as nodes joined by randomly placed, springlike bonds. Increasing the amount of bonds in a network results in an abrupt, dramatic increase in elastic moduli above a certain threshold – an example of a mechanical phase transition. While homogeneous networks are well studied, many tissues are made of disparate components and exhibit spatial fluctuations in the concentrations of their constituents. In this talk, I will first discuss recent work in which we explained the structural basis of the shear mechanics of healthy and chemically degraded cartilage by coupling a rigidity percolation framework with a background gel. Our model takes into account collagen concentration, as well as the concentration of peptidoglycans in the surrounding polyelectrolyte gel, to produce a structureproperty relationship that describes the shear mechanics of both sound and diseased cartilage. I will next discuss the introduction of structural correlation in constructing networks, such that sparse and dense patches emerge. I find moderate correlation allows a network to become rigid with fewer bonds, while this benefit is partly erased by excessive correlation. We explain this phenomenon through analysis of the spatial fluctuations in strained networks’ displacement fields. Finally, I will address our work’s implications for non-invasive diagnosis of pathology, as well as rational design of prostheses and novel soft materials.
Flow singularities in soft materials: from thermal motion to active molecular stresses
The motion of passive or active agents in soft materials generates long ranged deformation fields with signatures informed by hydrodynamics and the properties of the soft matter host. These signatures are even more complex when the soft matter host itself is an active material. Measurement of these fields reveals mechanics of the soft materials and hydrodynamics central to understanding self-organization. In this talk, I first introduce a new method based on correlated displacement velocimetry, and use the method to measure flow fields around particles trapped at the interface between immiscible fluids. These flow fields, decomposed into interfacial hydrodynamic multipoles, including force monopole and dipole flows, provide key insights essential to understanding the interface’s mechanical response. I then extend this method to various actomyosin systems to measure local strain fields around myosin molecular motors. I show how active stresses propagate in 2d liquid crystalline structures and in disordered networks that are formed by the actin filaments. In particular, the response functions of contractile and stable gels are characterized. Through similar analysis, I also measure the retrograde flow fields of stress fibers in single cells to understand subcellular mechanochemical systems.
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
Design Principles of Living Matter
In this talk, I will describe my lab’s recent efforts to understand the design principles of the active, soft materials that drive cell morphogenesis. In particular, we are interested in how collections of myosin II motors and actin polymers generate, relax, sense and adapt to mechanical force. I will discuss how motor-filament interactions lead to either distributed extensile or contractile stresses as the mechanics of the system changes from fluid to solid. Using optical control of motors, we are now exploring how spatially structured stress can be used to drive local flows and motion. If time, I will also describe how feedbacks between local geometry and activity can be harnessed to drive morphogenetic changes in model systems.