Tuned, driven, and active soft matter
Andreas M. Menzel

TL;DR
This review explores how soft matter systems respond to external stimuli, ranging from quasi-static tuning to active self-driven behaviors, highlighting their complex out-of-equilibrium properties and seeking unifying principles.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of soft matter systems' responses to external stimuli across different levels of complexity, emphasizing common features and underlying principles.
Findings
Soft matter exhibits diverse responses to external stimuli.
Active systems show collective behaviors similar to passive systems.
Unifying principles may underlie out-of-equilibrium soft matter phenomena.
Abstract
One characteristic feature of soft matter systems is their strong response to external stimuli. As a consequence they are comparatively easily driven out of their ground state and out of equilibrium, which leads to many of their fascinating properties. Here, we review illustrative examples. This review is structured by an increasing distance from the equilibrium ground state. On each level, examples of increasing degree of complexity are considered. In detail, we first consider systems that are quasi-statically tuned or switched to a new state by applying external fields. These are common liquid crystals, liquid crystalline elastomers, or ferrogels and magnetic elastomers. Next, we concentrate on systems steadily driven from outside e.g. by an imposed flow field. In our case, we review the reaction of nematic liquid crystals, of bulk-filling periodically modulated structures such as…
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