Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Louis Kang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Louis Kang.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Chiral structures from achiral liquid crystals in cylindrical capillaries

Joonwoo Jeong; Louis Kang; Zoey S. Davidson; Peter J. Collings; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh

Significance Nematic liquid crystals (LCs) are arguably the simplest examples of partially ordered condensed matter, and they are core materials in many commercial products. Our experiments explore fundamental questions about how chiral configurations of LCs can arise from achiral building blocks. Left- and right-handed chiral structures are produced by a delicate balance of LC bulk elasticity and surface conditions in confinement. The key experimental ingredients are biocompatible aqueous lyotropic chromonic LCs that twist easily. Combined with the new constraints, this class of achiral LC exhibits chiral structures and a rich assortment of defects, which hint at applications in sensing and optics. We study chiral symmetry-broken configurations of nematic liquid crystals (LCs) confined to cylindrical capillaries with homeotropic anchoring on the cylinder walls (i.e., perpendicular surface alignment). Interestingly, achiral nematic LCs with comparatively small twist elastic moduli relieve bend and splay deformations by introducing twist deformations. In the resulting twisted and escaped radial (TER) configuration, LC directors are parallel to the cylindrical axis near the center, but to attain radial orientation near the capillary wall, they escape along the radius through bend and twist distortions. Chiral symmetry-breaking experiments in polymer-coated capillaries are carried out using Sunset Yellow FCF, a lyotropic chromonic LC with a small twist elastic constant. Its director configurations are investigated by polarized optical microscopy and explained theoretically with numerical calculations. A rich phenomenology of defects also arises from the degenerate bend/twist deformations of the TER configuration, including a nonsingular domain wall separating domains of opposite twist handedness but the same escape direction and singular point defects (hedgehogs) separating domains of opposite escape direction. We show the energetic preference for singular defects separating domains of opposite twist handedness compared with those of the same handedness, and we report remarkable chiral configurations with a double helix of disclination lines along the cylindrical axis. These findings show archetypally how simple boundary conditions and elastic anisotropy of confined materials lead to multiple symmetry breaking and how these broken symmetries combine to create a variety of defects.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Syncytial Drosophila Embryo as a Mechanically Excitable Medium

Timon Idema; Julien O. Dubuis; Louis Kang; M. Lisa Manning; Philip C Nelson; T. C. Lubensky; Andrea J. Liu

Mitosis in the early syncytial Drosophila embryo is highly correlated in space and time, as manifested in mitotic wavefronts that propagate across the embryo. In this paper we investigate the idea that the embryo can be considered a mechanically-excitable medium, and that mitotic wavefronts can be understood as nonlinear wavefronts that propagate through this medium. We study the wavefronts via both image analysis of confocal microscopy videos and theoretical models. We find that the mitotic waves travel across the embryo at a well-defined speed that decreases with replication cycle. We find two markers of the wavefront in each cycle, corresponding to the onsets of metaphase and anaphase. Each of these onsets is followed by displacements of the nuclei that obey the same wavefront pattern. To understand the mitotic wavefronts theoretically we analyze wavefront propagation in excitable media. We study two classes of models, one with biochemical signaling and one with mechanical signaling. We find that the dependence of wavefront speed on cycle number is most naturally explained by mechanical signaling, and that the entire process suggests a scenario in which biochemical and mechanical signaling are coupled.


Physical Review E | 2015

Chiral Structures And Defects Of Lyotropic Chromonic Liquid Crystals Induced By Saddle- Splay Elasticity

Zoey S. Davidson; Louis Kang; Joonwoo Jeong; Tim Still; Peter J. Collings; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh

An experimental and theoretical study of lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs) confined in cylinders with degenerate planar boundary conditions elucidates LCLC director configurations. When the Frank saddle-splay modulus is more than twice the twist modulus, the ground state adopts an inhomogeneous escaped-twisted configuration. Analysis of the configuration yields a large saddle-splay modulus, which violates Ericksen inequalities but not thermodynamic stability. Lastly, we observe point defects between opposite-handed domains, and we explain a preference for point defects over domain walls.


Soft Matter | 2016

Entropic forces stabilize diverse emergent structures in colloidal membranes

Louis Kang; Thomas Gibaud; Zvonimir Dogic; T. C. Lubensky

The depletion interaction mediated by non-adsorbing polymers promotes condensation and assembly of repulsive colloidal particles into diverse higher-order structures and materials. One example, with particularly rich emergent behaviors, is the formation of two-dimensional colloidal membranes from a suspension of filamentous fd viruses, which act as rods with effective repulsive interactions, and dextran, which acts as a condensing, depletion-inducing agent. Colloidal membranes exhibit chiral twist even when the constituent virus mixture lacks macroscopic chirality, change from a circular shape to a striking starfish shape upon changing the chirality of constituent rods, and partially coalesce via domain walls through which the viruses twist by 180°. We formulate an entropically-motivated theory that can quantitatively explain these experimental structures and measurements, both previously published and newly performed, over a wide range of experimental conditions. Our results elucidate how entropy alone, manifested through the viruses as Frank elastic energy and through the depletants as an effective surface tension, drives the formation and behavior of these diverse structures. Our generalizable principles propose the existence of analogous effects in molecular membranes and can be exploited in the design of reconfigurable colloidal structures.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Chiral twist drives raft formation and organization in membranes composed of rod-like particles

Louis Kang; T. C. Lubensky

Significance Chiral objects are different from their mirror images and have properties that are physically forbidden for achiral objects. We show theoretically how one of these properties, the preference for chiral rods to adopt twisted configurations, generates an array of rafts in membranes formed by rod-like particles. Our theory can predict the composition, size, and interactions of these rafts based on measurable attributes of the rods, and its agreement with experimental data from a virus-based system supports its validity. Moreover, it proposes a mechanism for the stabilization of rafts in cell membranes, which are composed of chiral molecules. These lipid rafts are hypothesized to have important biological functions, and their manipulation may rely on a command of molecular chirality. Lipid rafts are hypothesized to facilitate protein interaction, tension regulation, and trafficking in biological membranes, but the mechanisms responsible for their formation and maintenance are not clear. Insights into many other condensed matter phenomena have come from colloidal systems, whose micron-scale particles mimic basic properties of atoms and molecules but permit dynamic visualization with single-particle resolution. Recently, experiments showed that bidisperse mixtures of filamentous viruses can self-assemble into colloidal monolayers with thermodynamically stable rafts exhibiting chiral structure and repulsive interactions. We quantitatively explain these observations by modeling the membrane particles as chiral liquid crystals. Chiral twist promotes the formation of finite-sized rafts and mediates a repulsion that distributes them evenly throughout the membrane. Although this system is composed of filamentous viruses whose aggregation is entropically driven by dextran depletants instead of phospholipids and cholesterol with prominent electrostatic interactions, colloidal and biological membranes share many of the same physical symmetries. Chiral twist can contribute to the behavior of both systems and may account for certain stereospecific effects observed in molecular membranes.


Physical Review E | 2015

Erratum: Chiral structures and defects of lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals induced by saddle-splay elasticity [Phys. Rev. E91, 050501(R) (2015)]

Zoey S. Davidson; Louis Kang; Joonwoo Jeong; Tim Still; Peter J. Collings; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

Membrane rafts stabilized by chiral liquid crystal correction to bare interfacial tension

Louis Kang; T. C. Lubensky


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Chiral defects of achiral nematic liquid crystals in capillaries with homeotropic anchoring

Louis Kang; Joonwoo Jeong; Zoey S. Davidson; Peter J. Collings; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015

Planar Anchoring of Achiral Nematic Liquid Crystals in Capillaries --- with a Twist

Zoey S. Davidson; Joonwoo Jeong; Louis Kang; Peter J. Collings; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014

Escaped-radial configuration with a twist: lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals confined to cylindrical cavities

Joonwoo Jeong; Louis Kang; Zoey S. Davidson; Matthew Lohr; Daniel A. Beller; Randall D. Kamien; T. C. Lubensky; Arjun G. Yodh; Peter J. Collings

Collaboration


Dive into the Louis Kang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T. C. Lubensky

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arjun G. Yodh

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter J. Collings

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zoey S. Davidson

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrea J. Liu

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tim Still

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Timon Idema

Delft University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel A. Beller

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge