Instability of flat disks with respect to the formation of twisted ribbons in smectic-A monolayers
Hao Tu, Robert A. Pelcovits

TL;DR
This paper investigates the instability of flat smectic-A monolayer disks leading to twisted ribbon formation, using a theoretical model to analyze nucleation, rippling, and stretching effects, aligning with experimental observations.
Contribution
It applies a combined theoretical model to study the nucleation and formation of twisted ribbons from flat disks in smectic-A monolayers, focusing on rippling and stretching mechanisms.
Findings
Radial ripples grow as edge energy decreases, matching experiments.
Out-of-plane ripples saturate at a small size, unlikely to form ribbons.
Stretching the membrane edge can energetically favor ribbon formation.
Abstract
Smectic-A monolayers self-assembled from aqueous solutions of chiral fd viruses and a polymer depletant can assume a variety of shapes such as flat disks and twisted ribbons. A theoretical model based on the de Gennes model for the smectic A phase, the Helfrich model of membrane elasticity and a simple edge energy has been previously used to calculate the disk-ribbon phase diagram. In this paper we apply this model to the nucleation process of ribbons. First, we study the "rippled disks" that have been observed as precursors of ribbons. Using a model shape proposed by Meyer which includes rippling in both the in-plane and out of plane directions, we study the energetics of the disks as functions of the edge energy modulus (a measure of the polymer concentration) and the mean curvature modulus k. We find that as the edge energy modulus is reduced the radial size of the ripples grows…
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