Abstract
An enticing feature of active materials is the possibility of controlling macroscale rheological properties through the activity of the microscopic constituents. Using a unique combination of microscopy and rheology we study three dimensional microtubule-based active materials whose autonomous flows are powered by a continually rearranging connected network. We quantify the relationship between the microscopic dynamics and the bulk mechanical properties of these nonequilibrium networks. Experiments reveal a surprising nonmonotonic viscosity that strongly depends on the relative magnitude of the rate of internally generated activity and the externally applied shear. A simple two-state mechanical model that accounts for both the solidlike and yielded fluidlike elements of the network accurately describes the rheological measurements.
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CITATION STYLE
Gagnon, D. A., Dessi, C., Berezney, J. P., Boros, R., Chen, D. T. N., Dogic, Z., & Blair, D. L. (2020). Shear-Induced Gelation of Self-Yielding Active Networks. Physical Review Letters, 125(17). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.125.178003
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