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Putting the Squeeze on Phase Separation

SLAM Seminar

Date: Thursday, June 2, 2022 11:00 - 12:00
Speaker: Eric Dufresne (ETH Zurich)
Location: Heinzel Seminar Room / Office Bldg West (I21.EG.101)
Series: SLAM Seminar
Host: Scott Waitukaitis
Contact: PETZ Caroline

Living organisms build optical and mechanical metamaterials.  These intricate nano- and micro-structures rival the best we can manufacture in a clean room, yet they are constructed from naturally abundant resources with sustainable low-energy processes.   Made from a wide variety of organic and inorganic components, these materials can be found across nature, from single-celled organisms to vertebrates.   In recent decades, basic research has revealed many of the structure-property relationships governing their function, and inspired a wealth of synthetic structures that mimic them.  However, an essential question remains:  how do living systems precisely control the structure of materials at the nano- and micro-scales?

In this talk, I’ll introduce some fascinating structures found in algae and birds.  Although the former are made of silica, and the latter of protein, both structures are thought to share a common physical origin: phase separation.  Phase separation is a generic process where a mixture is destabilized and its components spontaneously create multiple domains with different chemical compositions or physical structures.  While nano- and micro-architectures naturally emerge during any classical phase separation process, interfacial energy destabilizes them, driving coarsening as the system approaches thermodynamic equilibrium.  I will describe our recent experiments showing how elastic forces that emerge during phase separation can prevent coarsening and control the size, shape, and stability of micro- and nano-domains.


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