4.5 Article

Geometrical dynamics of edge-driven accretive surface growth

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspa.2021.0638

Keywords

geometrical; dynamics; edge; driven; growths

Funding

  1. College of Science at Virginia Tech (CNK)
  2. US NSF [DMR-2011754, DMR-1922321]
  3. Simons Foundation
  4. Henri Seydoux Fund

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This study examines the formation of mineralized thin-walled structures through localized growth along their edges. A mathematical framework is developed to describe the shape of these structures, and solutions of the equations capture various geometric precipitate patterns.
Accretion of mineralized thin wall-like structures via localized growth along their edges is observed in physical and biological systems ranging from molluscan and brachiopod shells to carbonate-silica composite precipitates. To understand the shape of these mineralized structures, we develop a mathematical framework that treats the thin-walled shells as a smooth surface left in the wake of the growth front that can be described as an evolving space curve. Our theory then takes an explicit geometric form for the prescription of the velocity of the growth front curve, along with compatibility relations and a closure equation related to the nature of surface curling. Solutions of these equations capture a range of geometric precipitate patterns seen in abiotic and biotic forms across scales. In addition to providing a framework for the growth and form of these thin-walled morphologies, our theory suggests a new class of dynamical systems involving moving space curves that are compatible with non-Euclidean embeddings of surfaces.

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