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Publications

Glassy dislocation dynamics in 2D colloidal dimer crystals

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
S.J. Gerbode
U. Agarwal
D.C. Ong
C.M. Liddell
F. Escobedo
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Although glassy relaxation is typically associated with disorder, here we report on a new type of glassy dynamics relating to dislocations within 2D crystals of colloidal dimers. Previous studies have demonstrated that dislocation motion in dimer crystals is restricted by certain particle orientations. Here, we drag an optically trapped particle through such dimer crystals, creating dislocations. We find a two-stage relaxation response where initially dislocations glide until encountering particles that cage their motion.

Journal
Physical Review Letters
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Constitutive curve and velocity profile in entangled polymers during start-up of steady shear flow

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
K.A. Hayes
M.R. Buckley
H. Qi
Itai Cohen
L.A. Archer
Abstract

Time-dependent shear stress versus shear rate, constitutive curve, and velocity profile measurements are reported in entangled polymer solutions during start-up of steady shear flow. By combining confocal microscopy and particle image velocimetry (PIV), we determine the time-dependent velocity profile in polybutadiene and polystyrene solutions seeded with fluorescent 150 nm silica and 7.5 μm melamine particles.

Journal
Macromolecules
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Fruit flies modulate passive wing pitching to generate in-flight turns

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
A.J. Bergou
L. Ristroph
J. Guckenheimer
Itai Cohen
Z.J. Wang
Abstract

Flying insects execute aerial maneuvers through subtle manipulations of their wing motions. Here, we measure the free-flight kinematics of fruit flies and determine how they modulate their wing pitching to induce sharp turns. By analyzing the torques these insects exert to pitch their wings, we infer that the wing hinge acts as a torsional spring that passively resists the wing's tendency to flip in response to aerodynamic and inertial forces. To turn, the insects asymmetrically change the spring rest angles to generate asymmetric rowing motions of their wings.

Journal
Physical Review Letters
Date Published
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Z. Jane Wang Group

Discovering the flight autostabilizer of fruit flies by inducing aerial stumbles

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
L. Ristroph
A.J. Bergou
G. Ristroph
K. Coumes
G.J. Berman
J. Guckenheimer
Z.J. Wang
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Just as the Wright brothers implemented controls to achieve stable airplane flight, flying insects have evolved behavioral strategies that ensure recovery from flight disturbances. Pioneering studies performed on tethered and dissected insects demonstrate that the sensory, neurological, and musculoskeletal systems play important roles in flight control. Such studies, however, cannot produce an integrative model of insect flight stability because they do not incorporate the interaction of these systems with free-flight aerodynamics.

Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Date Published
Funding Source
0832782
0933332
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Z. Jane Wang Group

High-resolution spatial mapping of shear properties in cartilage

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.R. Buckley
A.J. Bergou
J. Fouchard
L.J. Bonassar
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Structural properties of articular cartilage such as proteoglycan content, collagen content and collagen alignment are known to vary over length scales as small as a few microns (Bullough and Goodfellow, 1968; Bi et al., 2006). Characterizing the resulting variation in mechanical properties is critical for understanding how the inhomogeneous architecture of this tissue gives rise to its function.

Journal
Journal of Biomechanics
Date Published
Funding Source
CMMI-0726773
DMR-0606040
CCMR MRSEC SEED DMR-0079992
R21AR054867
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Partial universality: Pinch-off dynamics in fluids with smectic liquid crystalline order

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
J.R. Savage
M. Caggioni
P.T. Spicer
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Droplet pinch-off of fluids with liquid crystalline order is a common yet poorly understood process. We report on measurements of pinch-off dynamics for a lyotropic surfactant/water solution in the lamellar phase and a thermotropic liquid crystal in the smectic phase. We find pinch-off is universal and well described by a similarity solution for a strain thinning power-law fluid. This finding is consistent with bulk rheology measurements which show these materials shear thin with the appropriate power-law dependence.

Journal
Soft Matter
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Automated hull reconstruction motion tracking (HRMT) applied to sideways maneuvers of free-flying insects

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
L. Ristroph
G.J. Berman
A.J. Bergou
Z.J. Wang
Itai Cohen
Abstract

Flying insects perform aerial maneuvers through slight manipulations of their wing motions. Because such manipulations in wing kinematics are subtle, a reliable method is needed to properly discern consistent kinematic strategies used by the insect from inconsistent variations and measurement error. Here, we introduce a novel automated method that accurately extracts full, 3D body and wing kinematics from high-resolution films of free-flying insects.

Journal
Journal of Experimental Biology
Date Published
Research Area
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group
Z. Jane Wang Group

High resolution shear profile measurements in entangled polymers

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
K.A. Hayes
M.R. Buckley
Itai Cohen
L.A. Archer
Abstract

We use confocal microscopy and particle image velocimetry to visualize motion of 250-300 nm. fluorescent tracer particles in entangled polymers subject to a rectilinear shear flow. Our results show linear velocity profiles in polymer solutions spanning a wide range of molecular weights and number of entanglements (8≤Z≤56), but reveal large differences between the imposed and measured shear rates. These findings disagree with recent reports that shear banding is a characteristic flow response of entangled polymers, and instead point to interfacial slip as an important source of strain loss.

Journal
Physical Review Letters
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group

Liquid interfaces in viscous straining flows: Numerical studies of the selective withdrawal transition

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
M.K. Berkenbusch
Itai Cohen
W.W. Zhang
Abstract

This paper presents a numerical analysis of the transition from selective withdrawal to viscous entrainment. In our model problem, an interface between two immiscible layers of equal viscosity is deformed by an axisymmetric withdrawal flow, which is driven by a point sink located some distance above the interface in the upper layer. We find that steady-state hump solutions, corresponding to selective withdrawal of liquid from the upper layer, cease to exist above a threshold withdrawal flux, and that this transition corresponds to a saddle-node bifurcation for the hump solutions.

Journal
Journal of Fluid Mechanics
Date Published
Funding Source
DMR-0213745
0213745
Group (Lab)
Itai Cohen Group