Active Foam: The Adaptive Mechanics of 2D Air-Liquid Foam under Cyclic Inflation
Laurel A. Kroo, Matthew Storm Bull, Manu Prakash

TL;DR
This study investigates how periodic inflation and deflation in 2D foam induce structural adaptations, swirl formations, and metastable state transitions, revealing new insights into active disordered soft matter dynamics.
Contribution
We introduce an experimental and theoretical framework for active foam, demonstrating how local activity induces structural changes, swirl patterns, and adaptive metastable states in disordered soft matter.
Findings
Periodic activity causes reversible and irreversible T1 transitions.
Vertices exhibit outward and inward displacements with enclosed swirl patterns.
Disorder and strain rate influence the cooperation and competition of swirl formations.
Abstract
Foam is a canonical example of disordered soft matter where local force balance leads to the competition of many metastable configurations. Here we present an experimental and theoretical framework for "active foam" where an individual voxel inflates and deflates periodically. We explore structural adaptations of this disordered material with respect to added activity. Periodic injection of local activity leads to a small number of irreversible and reversible T1 transitions throughout the foam. Regardless of the presence of T1 transitions, individual vertices will displace outwards and subsequently return back to their approximate original radial position; this radial displacement follows an inverse law. Surprisingly, each return trajectory does not retrace its outbound path but rather encloses a finite area, with either a CW or CCW direction - which we define as a local swirl. These…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Micro and Nano Robotics
