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Writhing and hockling instabilities in twisted...
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Writhing and hockling instabilities in twisted elastic fibers

Abstract

The buckling and twisting of slender, elastic fibers is a deep and well-studied field. A slender elastic rod that is twisted with respect to a fixed end will spontaneously form a loop, or hockle, to relieve the torsional stress that builds. Further twisting results in the formation of plectonemes -- a helical excursion in the fiber that extends with additional twisting. Here we use an idealized, micron-scale experiment to investigate the energy stored, and subsequently released, by hockles and plectonemes as they are pulled apart, in analogy with force spectroscopy studies of DNA and protein folding. Hysteresis loops in the snapping and unsnapping inform the stored energy in the twisted fiber structures.

Authors

Fortais A; Loukiantchenko E; Dalnoki-Veress K

Publication date

July 31, 2021

DOI

10.48550/arxiv.2108.00271

Preprint server

arXiv
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