Dresden 2006 – scientific programme
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AKB: Biologische Physik
AKB 2: Membranes: Conformations and Dynamics
AKB 2.4: Talk
Monday, March 27, 2006, 11:15–11:30, ZEU 260
Forced Crumpling of Self-Avoiding Elastic Sheets — •Vliegenthart Gerrit and Gompper Gerhard — IFF, Forschungszentrum Jülich
Thin elastic sheets are important materials across length scales ranging from mesoscopic (polymerized membranes, clay platelets, virus capsids) to macroscopic (paper, metal foils). The crumpling of such sheets by external forces is characterized by the formation of a complex pattern of folds. We have investigated the role of self-avoidance — the fact that the sheets cannot self-intersect — for the crumpling process by computer simulations. The force-compression relations of crumpled sheets for both self-avoiding and phantom sheets are found to obey universal power-law behaviors. However, self-avoiding sheets are much stiffer than phantom sheets, and they develop many more folds. Moreover, self-avoidance is relevant already at very small volume fractions. The fold-length distribution for crumpled sheets is determined and found to be well described by a log-normal distribution. The stiffening due to self-avoidance is reflected in the changing nature of the sheet-to-sheet contacts from line-like to two-dimensionally extended with increasing compression.