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Dive into the research topics where Larry A. Wilen is active.

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Featured researches published by Larry A. Wilen.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Universal deformation of soft substrates near a contact line and the direct measurement of solid surface stresses

Robert W. Style; Rostislav Boltyanskiy; Yonglu Che; J. S. Wettlaufer; Larry A. Wilen; Eric R. Dufresne

Droplets deform soft substrates near their contact lines. Using confocal microscopy, we measure the deformation of silicone gel substrates due to glycerol and fluorinated-oil droplets for a range of droplet radii and substrate thicknesses. For all droplets, the substrate deformation takes a universal shape close to the contact line that depends on liquid composition, but is independent of droplet size and substrate thickness. This shape is determined by a balance of interfacial tensions at the contact line and provides a novel method for direct determination of the surface stresses of soft substrates. Moreover, we measure the change in contact angle with droplet radius and show that Youngs law fails for small droplets when their radii approach an elastocapillary length scale. For larger droplets the macroscopic contact angle is constant, consistent with Youngs law.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Deformation of an elastic substrate by a three-phase contact line.

Elizabeth R. Jerison; Ye Xu; Larry A. Wilen; Eric R. Dufresne

Youngs classic analysis of the equilibrium of a three-phase contact line ignores the out-of-plane component of the liquid-vapor surface tension. While it is expected that this unresolved force is balanced by the elastic response of the solid, a definitive analysis has remained elusive because of an apparent divergence of stress at the contact line. While a number of theories have been presented to cut off the divergence, none of them have provided reasonable agreement with experimental data. We measure surface and bulk deformation of a thin elastic film near a three-phase contact line using fluorescence confocal microscopy. The out-of-plane deformation is well fit by a linear elastic theory incorporating an out-of-plane restoring force due to the surface tension of the solid substrate. This theory predicts that the deformation profile near the contact line is scale-free and independent of the substrate elastic modulus.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Patterning droplets with durotaxis

Robert W. Style; Yonglu Che; Su Ji Park; Byung Mook Weon; Jung Ho Je; Callen Hyland; Guy K. German; Michael Power; Larry A. Wilen; J. S. Wettlaufer; Eric R. Dufresne

Numerous cell types have shown a remarkable ability to detect and move along gradients in stiffness of an underlying substrate—a process known as durotaxis. The mechanisms underlying durotaxis are still unresolved, but generally believed to involve active sensing and locomotion. Here, we show that simple liquid droplets also undergo durotaxis. By modulating substrate stiffness, we obtain fine control of droplet position on soft, flat substrates. Unlike other control mechanisms, droplet durotaxis works without imposing chemical, thermal, electrical, or topographical gradients. We show that droplet durotaxis can be used to create large-scale droplet patterns and is potentially useful for many applications, such as microfluidics, thermal control, and microfabrication.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Imaging in-plane and normal stresses near an interface crack using traction force microscopy

Ye Xu; Wilfried C. Engl; Elizabeth R. Jerison; Kevin J. Wallenstein; Callen Hyland; Larry A. Wilen; Eric R. Dufresne

Colloidal coatings, such as paint, are all around us. However, we know little about the mechanics of the film-forming process because the composition and properties of drying coatings vary dramatically in space and time. To surmount this challenge, we extend traction force microscopy to quantify the spatial distribution of all three components of the stress at the interface of two materials. We apply this approach to image stress near the tip of a propagating interface crack in a drying colloidal coating and extract the stress intensity factor.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013

Grain boundary melting in ice

Erik S. Thomson; Hendrik Hansen-Goos; J. S. Wettlaufer; Larry A. Wilen

We describe an optical scattering study of grain boundary premelting in water ice. Ubiquitous long ranged attractive polarization forces act to suppress grain boundary melting whereas repulsive forces originating in screened Coulomb interactions and classical colligative effects enhance it. The liquid enhancing effects can be manipulated by adding dopant ions to the system. For all measured grain boundaries this leads to increasing premelted film thickness with increasing electrolyte concentration. Although we understand that the interfacial surface charge densities q(s) and solute concentrations can potentially dominate the film thickness, we cannot directly measure them within a given grain boundary. Therefore, as a framework for interpreting the data we consider two appropriate q(s) dependent limits; one is dominated by the colligative effect and other is dominated by electrostatic interactions.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

A direct optical method for the study of grain boundary melting

Erik S. Thomson; J. S. Wettlaufer; Larry A. Wilen

The structure and evolution of grain boundaries underlies the nature of polycrystalline materials. Here we describe an experimental apparatus and light reflection technique for measuring disorder at grain boundaries in optically clear material, in thermodynamic equilibrium. The approach is demonstrated on ice bicrystals. Crystallographic orientation is measured for each ice sample. The type and concentration of impurity in the liquid can be controlled and the temperature can be continuously recorded and controlled over a range near the melting point. The general methodology is appropriate for a wide variety of materials.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2009

Light scattering from an isotropic layer between uniaxial crystals.

Erik S. Thomson; Larry A. Wilen; J. S. Wettlaufer

We develop a model for the reflection and transmission of plane waves by an isotropic layer sandwiched between two uniaxial crystals of arbitrary orientation. In the laboratory frame, reflection and transmission coefficients corresponding to the principal polarization directions in each crystal are given explicitly in terms of the [Formula: see text] axis and propagation directions. The solution is found by first deriving explicit expressions for reflection and transmission amplitude coefficients for waves propagating from an arbitrarily oriented uniaxial anisotropic material into an isotropic material. By combining these results with Lekners (1991 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter3xa06121-33) earlier treatment of waves propagating from isotropic media to anisotropic media and employing a matrix method we determine a solution to the general form of the multiple reflection case. The example system of a wetted interface between two ice crystals is used to contextualize the results.


Physics Letters A | 2018

Circuit bounds on stochastic transport in the Lorenz equations

Scott Weady; Sahil Agarwal; Larry A. Wilen; J. S. Wettlaufer

Abstract In turbulent Rayleigh–Benard convection one seeks the relationship between the heat transport, captured by the Nusselt number, and the temperature drop across the convecting layer, captured by the Rayleigh number. In experiments, one measures the Nusselt number for a given Rayleigh number, and the question of how close that value is to the maximal transport is a key prediction of variational fluid mechanics in the form of an upper bound. The Lorenz equations have traditionally been studied as a simplified model of turbulent Rayleigh–Benard convection, and hence it is natural to investigate their upper bounds, which has previously been done numerically and analytically, but they are not as easily accessible in an experimental context. Here we describe a specially built circuit that is the experimental analogue of the Lorenz equations and compare its output to the recently determined upper bounds of the stochastic Lorenz equations [1] . The circuit is substantially more efficient than computational solutions, and hence we can more easily examine the system. Because of offsets that appear naturally in the circuit, we are motivated to study unique bifurcation phenomena that arise as a result. Namely, for a given Rayleigh number, we find a reentrant behavior of the transport on noise amplitude and this varies with Rayleigh number passing from the homoclinic to the Hopf bifurcation.


Soft Matter | 2014

Traction force microscopy in physics and biology

Robert W. Style; Rostislav Boltyanskiy; Guy K. German; Callen Hyland; Christopher W. MacMinn; Aaron F. Mertz; Larry A. Wilen; Ye Xu; Eric R. Dufresne


Physical Review Letters | 1996

A Theory of Premelting Dynamics for all Power Law Forces

J. S. Wettlaufer; M. G. Worster; Larry A. Wilen; J. G. Dash

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Ye Xu

Beihang University

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M. G. Worster

University of Washington

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