Etienne Jambon-Puillet
@ejambonp.bsky.social
160 followers 210 following 13 posts
CNRS researcher in LadHyX. Interested in the deformation of fluids and soft solids. Previously @SoftLiv_ETH, @LiquidsLab, @IoP_UvA and @d_Alembert_. http://ejambonpuillet.wordpress.com
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ejambonp.bsky.social
New preprint: arxiv.org/abs/2501.01875
"Dense array of elastic hairs obstructing a fluidic channel"
I guess it was time I post something here! Explanations below 🧵👇
ejambonp.bsky.social
In the manuscript, we model these bioconvection rolls with simulations of phototactic advection-diffusion and demonstrate how to harness them for particle transport.
ejambonp.bsky.social
Depending on the particles’ density, they are either attracted to or repelled by the dense algae region, allowing various modes of micromanipulation.
ejambonp.bsky.social
But since these algae are slightly denser than water, concentrating them generates bioconvection rolls. These flows act on a much larger scale than individual algae and can thus efficiently transport large particles over millimetric distances!
ejambonp.bsky.social
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a phototactic alga. When exposed to a strong light stimulus, it swims away from it. This allows us to locally concentrate them with a light stimulus.
ejambonp.bsky.social
Did you know you can manipulate hundreds of microparticles using phototactic algae?
This is what we show in our last preprint, led by T. Laroussi and J. Bouvard: arxiv.org/abs/2509.08133
🧵👇
Reposted by Etienne Jambon-Puillet
nathanvani.bsky.social
Our article on the junction of slender objects under tension has been published @pmmh-lab.bsky.social! We discuss a cool phenomenon found in numerous systems, from kirigamis, kuttsukigami from @abcroll.bsky.social, and inflatables to more traditional tearing/peeling
www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Reposted by Etienne Jambon-Puillet
antoinedeblais.bsky.social
The 🪱 mania continues!
In our latest study, led by Rosa, we explored the locomotion and dynamics of living worms—acting as active polymers—navigating a porous environment made of 3D-printed pillar arrays. And we found something surprising...
ejambonp.bsky.social
Inspired by natural system, the non-linear properties of such `hairy channels' can be harnessed to build passive flow control systems such as relief valves, flow rectifiers, or more complex non-linear networks.
ejambonp.bsky.social
Coupling the two gives a reduced order fluid-structure interaction model that quantitatively reproduces the experiments. It also suggests that the system can be described by a single dimensionless parameter combining elastic, viscous and geometrical properties.
ejambonp.bsky.social
To rationalize it, I model the hair array as a deformable porous media whose size is dictated by the bending of individual hairs under fluid loading.
ejambonp.bsky.social
This yields a non-linear hydraulic resistance that I explore experimentally and theoretically for laminar flows.
ejambonp.bsky.social
When confined in a channel of size comparable to the hairs themselves and subject to a pressure driven flow, they strongly perturb the flow and if soft enough they bend and change the channel geometry significantly.
ejambonp.bsky.social
Many natural surfaces such as our skin, our tongue, or our blood vessels are covered with dense arrays of soft hair-like structures.
ejambonp.bsky.social
New preprint: arxiv.org/abs/2501.01875
"Dense array of elastic hairs obstructing a fluidic channel"
I guess it was time I post something here! Explanations below 🧵👇
ejambonp.bsky.social
Great initiative. Add me please :)