Extreme cooperative swelling in topologically disordered fibre entanglements
Alistair R. Overy, Raj Pandya, Phillip M. Maffettone, Philip A., Chater, Arkadiy Simonov, Andrew L. Goodwin

TL;DR
This study investigates how topological disorder affects the swelling behavior of fibrous entanglements, revealing that certain disordered states can exhibit extreme and cooperative swelling similar to ordered structures.
Contribution
The paper introduces a geometric and lattice-dynamical model to analyze the impact of disorder on swelling, showing that disordered entanglements can achieve large, cooperative swelling responses.
Findings
Disorder often reduces swelling capacity.
Certain disordered states can exhibit large swelling.
Disordered entanglements can surpass ordered structures in swelling.
Abstract
Entangled states are ubiquitous amongst fibrous materials, whether naturally occurring (keratin, collagen, DNA) or synthetic (nanotube assemblies, elastane). A key mechanical characteristic of these systems is their ability to reorganise in response to external stimuli, as implicated in e.g. hydration-induced swelling of keratin fibrils in human skin. During swelling, the curvature of individual fibres changes to give a cooperative and reversible structural reorganisation that opens up a pore network. The phenomenon is known to be highly dependent on topology, even if the nature of this dependence is not well understood: certain ordered entanglements (`weavings') can swell to many times their original volume while others are entirely incapable of swelling at all. Given this sensitivity to topology, it is puzzling how the disordered entanglements of many real materials manage to support…
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