Jean-Marc Fromental
University of Montpellier
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jean-Marc Fromental.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Luca Lanotte; Johannes Mauer; Simon Mendez; Dmitry A. Fedosov; Jean-Marc Fromental; Viviana Claveria; Franck Nicoud; Gerhard Gompper; Manouk Abkarian
Significance Our work reveals rich RBCs’ dynamic morphologies which govern blood shear thinning under microcirculatory flow conditions, contrary to the current paradigm assuming steady RBC orientation and membrane circulation. Our results suggest that any pathological change in RBCs’ local rheology will impact the onset of these morphological transitions and should play a key role in pathological blood flow. Blood viscosity decreases with shear stress, a property essential for an efficient perfusion of the vascular tree. Shear thinning is intimately related to the dynamics and mutual interactions of RBCs, the major component of blood. Because of the lack of knowledge about the behavior of RBCs under physiological conditions, the link between RBC dynamics and blood rheology remains unsettled. We performed experiments and simulations in microcirculatory flow conditions of viscosity, shear rates, and volume fractions, and our study reveals rich RBC dynamics that govern shear thinning. In contrast to the current paradigm, which assumes that RBCs align steadily around the flow direction while their membranes and cytoplasm circulate, we show that RBCs successively tumble, roll, deform into rolling stomatocytes, and, finally, adopt highly deformed polylobed shapes for increasing shear stresses, even for semidilute volume fractions of the microcirculation. Our results suggest that any pathological change in plasma composition, RBC cytosol viscosity, or membrane mechanical properties will affect the onset of these morphological transitions and should play a central role in pathological blood rheology and flow behavior.
Soft Matter | 2010
Simona Maccarrone; Giovanni Brambilla; Olivier Pravaz; Agnes Duri; Matteo Ciccotti; Jean-Marc Fromental; Eugene Pashkovski; Alex Lips; David A. Sessoms; Veronique Trappe; Luca Cipelletti
We use photon correlation imaging, a recently introduced space-resolved dynamic light scattering method, to investigate the spatial correlation of the dynamics of a variety of jammed and glassy soft materials. Strikingly, we find that in deeply jammed soft materials spatial correlations of the dynamics are quite generally ultra-long ranged, extending up to the system size, orders of magnitude larger than any relevant structural length scale, such as the particle size, or the mesh size for colloidal gel systems. This has to be contrasted with the case of molecular, colloidal and granular “supercooled” fluids, where spatial correlations of the dynamics extend over a few particles at most. Our findings suggest that ultra long range spatial correlations in the dynamics of a system are directly related to the origin of elasticity. While solid-like systems with entropic elasticity exhibit very moderate correlations, systems with enthalpic elasticity exhibit ultra-long range correlations due to the effective transmission of strains throughout the contact network.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Serge Mora; Ty Phou; Jean-Marc Fromental; Yves Pomeau
We demonstrate the instability of the free surface of a soft elastic solid facing downwards. Experiments are carried out using a gel of constant density ρ, shear modulus μ, put in a rigid cylindrical dish of depth h. When turned upside down, the free surface of the gel undergoes a normal outgoing acceleration g. It remains perfectly flat for ρgh/μ<α* with α*≃6, whereas a steady pattern spontaneously appears in the opposite case. This phenomenon results from the interplay between the gravitational energy and the elastic energy of deformation, which reduces the Rayleigh waves celerity and vanishes it at the threshold.
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Sristhti Arora; Jean-Marc Fromental; Serge Mora; Ty Phou; Laurence Ramos; Christian Ligoure
We investigate freely expanding sheets formed by ultrasoft gel beads, and liquid and viscoelastic drops, produced by the impact of the bead or drop on a silicon wafer covered with a thin layer of liquid nitrogen that suppresses viscous dissipation thanks to an inverse Leidenfrost effect. Our experiments show a unified behavior for the impact dynamics that holds for solids, liquids, and viscoelastic fluids and that we rationalize by properly taking into account elastocapillary effects. In this framework, the classical impact dynamics of solids and liquids, as far as viscous dissipation is negligible, appears as the asymptotic limits of a universal theoretical description. A novel material-dependent characteristic velocity that includes both capillary and bulk elasticity emerges from this unified description of the physics of impact.
Physical Review Letters | 2010
Serge Mora; Ty Phou; Jean-Marc Fromental; L. M. Pismen; Yves Pomeau
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Serge Mora; Corrado Maurini; Ty Phou; Jean-Marc Fromental; Basile Audoly; Yves Pomeau
Physical Review E | 2012
Serge Mora; Ty Phou; Jean-Marc Fromental; Basile Audoly; Yves Pomeau
Journal of The Mechanics and Physics of Solids | 2018
Aditi Chakrabarti; Serge Mora; Franck Richard; Ty Phou; Jean-Marc Fromental; Yves Pomeau; Basile Audoly
Journal of Materials Science | 2015
Stephanie Etter; A. Faivre; Pierre Solignac; Sébastien Clément; Jean-Marc Fromental; Laurent Duffour; Florence Despetis
arXiv: Biological Physics | 2017
Johannes Mauer; Luca Lanotte; Franck Nicoud; Viviana Claveria; Simon Mendez; Jean-Marc Fromental; Manouk Abkarian; Gerhard Gompper; Dmitry A. Fedosov