Abstract

Living liquid crystals, a realization of active nematics where a lyotropic liquid crystal is combined with active bacteria, exhibit a plethora of out-of-equilibrium phenomena that range from active turbulence and dynamic spatiotemporal patterns to the creation and annihilation of motile topological defects. Experiments and hydrodynamic simulations are used here to report on the emergence of bend stripes, which arise as spontaneous undulations of the director field in circularly aligned lyotropic liquid crystals doped with bacteria. The interplay between bacterial-induced hydrodynamic flows and elastic forces in the material induces remarkable deformation patterns consisting of branched, radially elongated bands of a high curvature of the director field. The average number of such branches increases with the distance from the center of the circular alignment, leading to the formation of a radial tree of bands that is reminiscent of a snowflake structure. Hydrodynamic simulations, which are in agreement with the experiments, are used to explain the origin of such structures and to provide additional insights into regimes that are beyond the limit of experimental measurements. In particular, it is found that when activity is switched off in the early stages of pattern formation, a pronounced decay of bend-distortion energy ensues, with little change of the splay energy, serving to confirm that the bend stripes are an outcome of activity-driven bend-instability phenomena. Taken together, experiments and simulations demonstrate a system in which strain and geometry can be combined to dynamically manipulate pattern formation in active matter, paving the way to a deeper understanding and finer control of active colloidal systems.2 MoreReceived 4 December 2018Revised 17 May 2019DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.9.031014Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.Published by the American Physical SocietyPhysics Subject Headings (PhySH)Research AreasLocomotionSelf-assemblyPhysical SystemsActive matterActive nematicsLiquid crystalsCondensed Matter, Materials & Applied Physics

Highlights

  • Active nematics represent a new class of nonequilibrium systems that combine the mechanical properties of liquid crystals with motility introduced on a microscopic level [1]

  • Experiments and simulations have been used to investigate the creation of radial trees of bend stripes in circularly aligned active liquid crystals consisting of a nontoxic lyotropic liquid crystal doped with live bacteria

  • The interplay between bacteria-induced hydrodynamic flows and the elasticity of the circularly aligned liquid crystal leads to the onset of intriguing dynamic patterns, consisting of branched, radially elongated bands of high curvature

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Summary

Introduction

Active nematics represent a new class of nonequilibrium systems that combine the mechanical properties of liquid crystals with motility introduced on a microscopic level [1]. One of the pioneering experimental realizations of active nematics is based on microtubule-molecular motors assays mixed with a depleting agent [13]. Current examples of active nematics include microtubule-motor protein mixtures [12,13,14,15], actin-motor protein systems [16,17,18], bacterial suspensions [19,20], cellular nematics [21,22,23,24,25,26], and suspensions of swimming bacteria in liquid crystals (termed living liquid crystals) [27,28,29,30]

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