4.8 Article

Cavitation controls droplet sizes in elastic media

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2102014118

关键词

phase separation; elastic gels; strain softening; pattern formation

资金

  1. Max Planck Society

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The study presents a theoretical description of droplets growing in an elastic matrix, revealing that large droplets only form when cavitation occurs, stabilizing the size and position of smaller droplets and increasing in density with faster cooling. The model also indicates how adjusting cooling protocols and nucleation site density affects droplet size distribution.
Biological cells use droplets to separate components and spatially control their interior. Experiments demonstrate that the complex, crowded cellular environment affects the droplet arrangement and their sizes. To understand this behavior, we here construct a theoretical description of droplets growing in an elastic matrix, which is motivated by experiments in synthetic systems where monodisperse emulsions form during a temperature decrease. We show that large droplets only form when they break the surrounding matrix in a cavitation event. The energy barrier associated with cavitation stabilizes small droplets on the order of the mesh size and diminishes the stochastic effects of nucleation. Consequently, the cavitated droplets have similar sizes and highly correlated positions. In particular, we predict the density of cavitated droplets, which increases with faster cooling, as in the experiments. Our model also suggests how adjusting the cooling protocol and the density of nucleation sites affects the droplet size distribution. In summary, our theory explains how elastic matrices affect droplets in the synthetic system, and it provides a framework for understanding the biological case.

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