Model of Active Solids: Rigid Body Motion and Shape-Changing Mechanisms

Active solids such as cell collectives, colloidal clusters, and active metamaterials exhibit diverse collective phenomena, ranging from rigid body motion to shape-changing mechanisms. The nonlinear dynamics of such active materials remains, however, poorly understood when they host zero-energy deformation modes and when noise is present. Here, we show that stress propagation in a model of active solids induces the spontaneous actuation of multiple soft floppy modes, even without exciting vibrational modes. By introducing an adiabatic approximation, we map the dynamics onto an effective Landau free energy, predicting mode selection and the onset of collective dynamics. These results open new ways to study and design living and robotic materials with multiple modes of locomotion and shape change.

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS

By: Claudio Hernández-López, Paul Baconnier, Corentin Coulais, Olivier Dauchot, and Gustavo Düring

Phys. Rev. Lett. 132, 238303 – Published 7 June 2024.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett...


Top



See also...

Polymer-chain configurations in active and passive baths

The configurations taken by polymers embedded in out-of-equilibrium baths may have broad implications in a variety of biological systems. As such, (…) 

> More...

Uncovering polymer’s unique spindle structure

A new study from Daeseok Kim and Teresa Lopez-Leon of Gulliver lab, in collaboration with Helen Ansell, Randall Kamien, and Eleni Katifori of the (…) 

> More...