Center for Biophysics and Quantitative Biology Master Calendar

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Active colloidal fluids

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering
Location
190 Engineering Sciences Building
Date
Feb 4, 2020   3:00 pm  
Speaker
Professor Petia Vlahovska, Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics, Northwestern University, February 4, 2020
Contact
Lindsey Henson
E-Mail
lrh@illinois.edu
Phone
217-300-8238
Views
559
Originating Calendar
MechSE Seminars

Abstract

Flocks of birds and schools of fish are familiar examples of emergent collective behavior, where interactions between self-propelled (active) individuals lead to coherent motion on a scale much larger than the isolated unit. Similar phenomena have been observed with active micro-particles such as bacteria and motile colloids.  Recently, the Quincke instability (spontaneous spinning of a dielectric particle in an applied uniform DC field) has attracted great interest as a means of propelling colloids, by simply letting the particles roll on a surface.   In this talk, I will present our experiments showing how Quincke rollers, previously studied mainly as active Brownian particles, can be designed to perform Run-and-Tumble-like locomotion mimicking bacteria such as E. coli. Populations of the Quincke random walkers self-organize and exhibit behaviors reminiscent of bacterial suspensions such as dynamic clusters and mesoscale turbulent-like flows. I will also discuss some novel collective dynamics of Quincke rotors levitating in a bulk fluid: unlike the rollers, the “hovers” form crystals, chains and other dynamical assemblies. 

Bio

Petia M. Vlahovska received a PhD in chemical engineering from Yale (2003) and MS in chemistry from University of Sofia “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Bulgaria (1994). Before joining the faculty at Northwestern University in 2017, she was a postdoctoral fellow in the Membrane Biophysics Lab at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces  in Germany (2005) and a faculty at Dartmouth College (2006-2010) and Brown University (2010-2017). Her research interests are in fluid dynamics, membrane biophysics, and soft matter. Prof. Vlahovska is the recipient of NSF CAREER Award, the David Crighton Fellowship from DAMPT, University of Cambridge (UK), and a Humboldt Research Fellowship (Germany).  In 2019, she was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society.

Host:  Professor Sascha Hilgenfeldt 

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