McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

CPM Seminar

Hydrodynamics and fluctuations on flat and curved membranes with applications to the microrheology of red blood cells

Alex Levine

UCLA

The dynamics of viscous or viscoelastic membranes surrounded by a viscous fluid plays an important biophysical role in e.g. understanding the mobility of proteins in cell membranes. These fluid membranes also provide an interesting physical system in which low-Reynolds-number hydrodynamics acquires an inherent length scale and where membrane curvature can dramatically change the mobility of membrane-bound particles. In this talk I first discuss the hydrodynamics of flat fluid membranes surrounded by bulk fluids, initially developed by Saffman and Delbrück (SD), and compute the hydrodynamic interactions between particles in such flat membranes. I then extend these theories to study flows in curved membranes, showing how curvature modifies the SD picture. Finally, I use these geometric ideas to study the effect of curvature on the fluctuation spectrum of (visco-)elastic membranes and apply that analysis to membrane microrheology. Using this theory, I analyze the fluctuation spectrum of human red blood cell membranes (measured by G. Popescu, UIUC) in order to extract their mechanical properties in various morphological states of the cell.

Thursday, December 2nd 2010, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)