Physics

Energetics of twisted elastic filament pairs

Document Type

Article

Abstract

We investigate the elastic energy stored in a filament pair as a function of applied twist by measuring torque under prescribed end-to-end separation conditions. We show that the torque increases rapidly to a peak with applied twist when the filaments are initially separate, then decreases to a minimum as the filaments cross and come into contact. The torque then increases again while the filaments form a double helix with increasing twist. A nonlinear elasto-geometric model that combines the effect of geometrical nonlinearities with large stretching and self-twist is shown to capture the evolution of the helical geometry, torque profile, and stored energy with twist. We find that a large fraction of the total energy is stored in stretching the filaments, which increases with separation distance and applied tension. We find that only a small fraction of energy is stored in the form of bending energy, and that the contribution due to contact energy is negligible. Further, we provide analytical formulas for the torque observed as a function of the applied twist and the inverse relation of the observed angle for a given applied torque in the Hookean limit. Our study highlights the consequences of stretchablility on filament twisting, which is a fundamental topological transformation relevant to making ropes, tying shoelaces, actuating robots, and the physical properties of entangled polymers. © 2024 American Physical Society.

Publication Title

Physical Review E

Publication Date

2-2024

Volume

109

Issue

2

ISSN

2470-0045

DOI

10.1103/PhysRevE.109.025003

Keywords

energy storage, elastic deformation, polymers, soft matter, biomolecules, elastomers

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