Gabriel Redner
Brandeis University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Gabriel Redner.
Nature Materials | 2015
Stephen J. DeCamp; Gabriel Redner; Aparna Baskaran; Michael F. Hagan; Zvonimir Dogic
The study of liquid crystals at equilibrium has led to fundamental insights into the nature of ordered materials, as well as to practical applications such as display technologies. Active nematics are a fundamentally different class of liquid crystals, driven away from equilibrium by the autonomous motion of their constituent rod-like particles. This internally generated activity powers the continuous creation and annihilation of topological defects, which leads to complex streaming flows whose chaotic dynamics seem to destroy long-range order. Here, we study these dynamics in experimental and computational realizations of active nematics. By tracking thousands of defects over centimetre-scale distances in microtubule-based active nematics, we identify a non-equilibrium phase characterized by a system-spanning orientational order of defects. This emergent order persists over hours despite defect lifetimes of only seconds. Similar dynamical structures are observed in coarse-grained simulations, suggesting that defect-ordered phases are a generic feature of active nematics.
Physical Review E | 2013
Gabriel Redner; Aparna Baskaran; Michael F. Hagan
Motivated by recent experiments, we study a system of self-propelled colloids that experience short-range attractive interactions and are confined to a surface. Using simulations we find that the phase behavior for such a system is reentrant as a function of activity: phase-separated states exist in both the low- and high-activity regimes, with a homogeneous active fluid in between. To understand the physical origins of reentrance, we develop a kinetic model for the systems steady-state dynamics whose solution captures the main features of the phase behavior. We also describe the varied kinetics of phase separation, which range from the familiar nucleation and growth of clusters to the complex coarsening of active particle gels.
Biophysical Journal | 2013
Gabriel Redner; Michael F. Hagan; Aparna Baskaran
We examine a minimal model for an active colloidal fluid in the form of self-propelled Brownian spheres that interact purely through excluded volume with no aligning interaction. Using simulations and analytic modeling, we quantify the phase diagram and separation kinetics. We show that this nonequilibrium active system undergoes an analog of an equilibrium continuous phase transition, with a binodal curve beneath which the system separates into dense and dilute phases whose concentrations depend only on activity. The dense phase is a unique material that we call an active solid, which exhibits the structural signatures of a crystalline solid near the crystal-hexatic transition point, and anomalous dynamics including superdiffusive motion on intermediate time scales.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Gabriel Redner; Caleb Wagner; Aparna Baskaran; Michael F. Hagan
Nonaligning self-propelled particles with purely repulsive excluded volume interactions undergo athermal motility-induced phase separation into a dilute gas and a dense cluster phase. Here, we use enhanced sampling computational methods and analytic theory to examine the kinetics of formation of the dense phase. Despite the intrinsically nonequilibrium nature of the phase transition, we show that the kinetics can be described using an approach analogous to equilibrium classical nucleation theory, governed by an effective free energy of cluster formation with identifiable bulk and surface terms. The theory captures the location of the binodal, nucleation rates as a function of supersaturation, and the cluster size distributions below the binodal, while discrepancies in the metastable region reveal additional physics about the early stages of active crystal formation. The success of the theory shows that a framework similar to equilibrium thermodynamics can be obtained directly from the microdynamics of an active system, and can be used to describe the kinetics of evolution toward nonequilibrium steady states.
Soft Matter | 2016
Elias Putzig; Gabriel Redner; Arvind Baskaran; Aparna Baskaran
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Michael F. Hagan; Abhijeet A. Joshi; Gabriel Redner; Michael L. Norton; Matthew Peterson; Seth Fraden; Aparna Baskaran
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Stephen J. DeCamp; Gabriel Redner; Michael F. Hagan; Zvonimir Dogic
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Gabriel Redner; Stephen J. DeCamp; Zvonimir Dogic; Michael F. Hagan
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Stephen J. DeCamp; Gabriel Redner; Michael F. Hagan; Zvonimir Dogic
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Gabriel Redner; Aparna Baskaran; Michael F. Hagan