| Literature DB >> 28336609 |
Kun-Ta Wu1, Jean Bernard Hishamunda1, Daniel T N Chen1, Stephen J DeCamp1, Ya-Wen Chang2, Alberto Fernández-Nieves2, Seth Fraden3, Zvonimir Dogic3.
Abstract
Transport of fluid through a pipe is essential for the operation of macroscale machines and microfluidic devices. Conventional fluids only flow in response to external pressure. We demonstrate that an active isotropic fluid, composed of microtubules and molecular motors, autonomously flows through meter-long three-dimensional channels. We establish control over the magnitude, velocity profile, and direction of the self-organized flows and correlate these to the structure of the extensile microtubule bundles. The inherently three-dimensional transition from bulk-turbulent to confined-coherent flows occurs concomitantly with a transition in the bundle orientational order near the surface and is controlled by a scale-invariant criterion related to the channel profile. The nonequilibrium transition of confined isotropic active fluids can be used to engineer self-organized soft machines.Year: 2017 PMID: 28336609 DOI: 10.1126/science.aal1979
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728