Published July 10, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Hydrodynamic coupling melts acoustically levitated crystalline rafts

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

Going beyond the manipulation of individual particles, first steps have recently been undertaken with acoustic levitation in air to investigate the collective dynamical properties of many-body systems self-assembled within the levitation plane. However, these assemblies have been limited to two-dimensional, close-packed rafts where forces due to scattered sound pull particles into direct frictional contact. Here, we overcome this restriction using particles small enough that the viscosity of air establishes a repulsive streaming flow at close range. By tuning the particle size relative to the characteristic length scale for viscous streaming, we control the interplay between attractive and repulsive forces and show how particles can be assembled into monolayer lattices with tunable spacing. While the strength of the levitating sound field does not affect the particles' steady-state separation, it controls the emergence of spontaneous excitations that can drive particle rearrangements in an effectively dissipationless, underdamped environment. Under the action of these excitations, a quiescent particle lattice transitions from a predominantly crystalline structure to a two-dimensional liquid-like state. We find that this transition is characterized by dynamic heterogeneity and intermittency, involving cooperative particle movements that remove the timescale associated with caging for the crystalline lattice. These results shed light on the nature of athermal excitations and instabilities that can arise from strong hydrodynamic coupling among interacting particles.

Data availability

All data are available at https://doi.org/10.18126/FJHL-CY15.

Files

Hydrodynamic-coupling-melts-acoustically-levitated-crystalline-rafts.pdf

Files (90.6 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:287dc629ecf169f8f52b723bc8710ad3
19.1 MB Preview Download
Appendix
md5:6346bf74b50601fc95567c87815b1e34
6.9 MB Preview Download
Video files
md5:61af9ec5ac7c8a966c4329107bb7b70c
64.6 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2301625120
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:6670

Funding

National Science Foundation
DMR-2104733

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Physics
Center(s) or Institute(s)
James Franck Institute