3.8 Article

Laplace pressure as a surface stress in fluid vesicles

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS A-MATHEMATICAL AND GENERAL
Volume 39, Issue 14, Pages 3771-3785

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0305-4470/39/14/019

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Consider a surface enclosing a fixed volume, described by a free energy depending only on the local geometry; for example, the Canham-Helfrich energy quadratic in the mean curvature describes a fluid membrane. The stress at any point on the surface is determined completely by geometry. In equilibrium, its divergence is proportional to the Laplace pressure, normal to the surface, maintaining the constraint on the volume. It is shown that this source itself can be expressed as the divergence of a position-dependent surface stress. As a consequence, the equilibrium can be described in terms of a conserved effective surface stress. Various non-trivial geometrical consequences of this identification are explored. In a cylindrical geometry, the cross-section can be viewed as a closed planar Euler elastic curve. With respect to an appropriate Centre the effective stress itself vanishes; this provides a remarkably simple relationship between the curvature and the position along the loop. In two or higher dimensions, it is shown that the only geometry consistent with the vanishing of the effective stress is spherical. It is argued that the appropriate generalization of the loop result will involve null stresses.

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