Dynamics of Active Defects on the Anisotropic Surface of an Ellipsoidal Droplet

We investigate the steady state of an ellipsoidal active nematic shell using experiments and numerical simulations. We create the shells by coating microsized ellipsoidal droplets with a protein-based active cytoskeletal gel, thus obtaining ellipsoidal core-shell structures. This system provides the appropriate conditions of confinement and geometry to investigate the impact of nonuniform curvature on an orderly active nematic fluid that features the minimum number of defects required by topology. We identify new time-dependent states where topological defects periodically oscillate between translational and rotational regimes, resulting in the spontaneous emergence of chirality. Our simulations of active nematohydrodynamics demonstrate that, beyond topology and activity, the dynamics of the active material are profoundly influenced by the local curvature and viscous anisotropy of the underlying droplet, as well as by external hydrodynamic forces stemming from the self-sustained rotational motion of defects. These results illustrate how the incorporation of curvature gradients into active nematic shells orchestrates remarkable spatiotemporal patterns, offering new insights into biological processes and providing compelling prospects for designing bioinspired micromachines.

Physical Review X

By: Martina Clairand, Ali Mozaffari, Jerôme Hardoüin, Rui Zhang, Claire Doré, Jordi Ignés-Mullol, Francesc Sagués, Juan J. de Pablo, and Teresa Lopez-Leon.

Phys. Rev. X 14, 031049 – Published 20 September 2024

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.14...


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