Phonons in a one-dimensional microfluidic crystal
Tsevi Beatus, Tsvi Tlusty, Roy Bar-Ziv

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of collective vibrational modes, akin to phonons, in a one-dimensional microfluidic crystal operating at very low Reynolds number, revealing unexpected acoustic phenomena in viscous-dominated systems.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical and experimental framework demonstrating phonon-like excitations in microfluidic crystals, a phenomenon previously thought unlikely at low Reynolds numbers.
Findings
Observation of acoustic phonons with ultra-low velocity
Unusual dispersion relations different from harmonic crystals
Identification of flow-induced long-range droplet interactions
Abstract
The development of a general theoretical framework for describing the behaviour of a crystal driven far from equilibrium has proved difficult1. Microfluidic crystals, formed by the introduction of droplets of immiscible fluid into a liquid-filled channel, provide a convenient means to explore and develop models to describe non-equilibrium dynamics2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. Owing to the fact that these systems operate at low Reynolds number (Re), in which viscous dissipation of energy dominates inertial effects, vibrations are expected to be over-damped and contribute little to their dynamics12, 13, 14. Against such expectations, we report the emergence of collective normal vibrational modes (equivalent to acoustic 'phonons') in a one-dimensional microfluidic crystal of water-in-oil droplets at Reapprox10-4. These phonons propagate at an ultra-low sound velocity of approx100 mum s-1…
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