Zapraszamy do sali 1.40, ul. Pasteura 5 o godzinie 09:30

Tomasz Bobiński (Faculty of Power and Aeronautical Engineering, Warsaw University of Technology)
Controlling surface water wave propagation is crucial for wave manipulation and cloaking technologies. By leveraging the invariance of shallow water equations under coordinate transformations, objects can be rendered invisible to incident waves. Traditional transformations often require spatially anisotropic bathymetries, which typically violate the assumptions of the depth-averaged models describing the propagation of water waves. We demonstrate that conformal mapping, which provides smoothly varying bathymetry, can be effectively applied to water waveguide systems with defects in the form of local variations in the waveguide wall shape. Our approach successfully cloaks these defects across a broad range of frequencies, including regimes where dispersive effects are significant. Despite the inherent dispersive nature of water waves, forward scattering remains weak, ensuring robust cloaking performance. Experimental results validate the broadband capabilities of this method.
Based on the results obtained in the case of the meandering waveguide, we present a novel technique to render objects invisible to incident waves in a water waveguide system with parallel walls at low frequencies. The invisibility of a waveguide defect, specifically a vertical surface-piercing circular cylinder, is achieved through local deformations of the waveguide walls in the immediate vicinity of the defect. Our method results in a reflection coefficient that is at least 20 times lower than in the case of a parallel waveguide. The effect is observed over a broad frequency range. Experimental results confirm the high efficiency of our approach, showing that backscattered energy is reduced by a factor of 100 to 5000 compared to the reference case within the considered frequency range.
Zapraszamy do sali 1.40, ul. Pasteura 5 o godzinie 09:30

Tetuko Kurniawan (IPPT PAN)
Droplet microfluidics is an innovative technique in biomedical research that leverages the creation of small, isolated compartments formed by immiscible fluids, typically a water-in-oil system, within a network of microscale channels on a chip. In this talk, I will explore droplet formation in the very low capillary number regime. Interestingly, droplet formation in this regime diverges from the well-known squeezing mechanism, as evidenced by a significant increase in droplet size and neck length before pinch-off with respect to the capillary number. A generalized scaling law was developed to predict droplet volume in microfluidic cross-junctions and was validated using experimental data from devices with varying cross-sectional geometries. These findings deepen our understanding of droplet formation mechanics in the very low capillary number range. Additionally, I will discuss the practical applications of droplet microfluidics as micro-sized incubators for cell culture. Effective strategies for reducing the loading time of cell-containing media and minimizing droplet liquid mass transport through the permeable PDMS material will be presented, resulting in the ability to sustain the viability of most cells for over 24 hours.
Zapraszamy do sali 1.40, ul. Pasteura 5 o godzinie 09:30

Dimitrius Khaladj (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, USA)
Conventional methods for lithium extraction via evaporation pools or hard rock mining are environmentally consequential both locally and globally. To meet the demand for mineral components for lithium batteries while lessening the environmental impact, new technologies for 'direct' lithium extraction aim to selectively capture lithium from aqueous solution among a mélange of competing ionic species. In this work, we present a new concept for direct lithium extraction based on far-from-equilibrium transport of lithium through self-assembled percolating colloidal graphene oxide (GO) driven by AC Electric fields. We report that these self-assembled GO networks enhance ionic conductivity, actively transporting and selecting lithium without requiring extensive pre-treatment. We demonstrate that lithium transport far-from-equilibrium can be enhanced relative to competing cations due to its weaker specific interactions with the percolating GO network, resulting in high mobility. This runs counter to many conventional approaches to lithium extraction, which rely on high lithium selectivity but are implicitly limited by low binding/exchange turnover rates. We propose that enhancing lithium transport, rather than binding selectivity, may be key to high-rate direct lithium extraction from brine sources.
Zapraszamy do sali 1.40, ul. Pasteura 5 o godzinie 09:30

Reinier van Buel (IFT UW)
Elastic turbulence, a chaotic flow state occurring in viscoelastic fluids at negligible Reynolds numbers, enhances fluid mixing on small scales, making it valuable for applications like lab-on-a-chip devices. Here, we show the influence of active and passive control on elastic turbulence using numerical simulations of the Oldroyd-B model in OpenFOAM®. In a two-dimensional Taylor-Couette geometry, the onset of elastic turbulence is characterised by a critical Weissenberg number, marking a transition from laminar to turbulent flow. Flow resistance and secondary-flow strength, serving as order parameters, increase with turbulence, correlating strongly with enhanced fluid mixing. Power-law scaling of velocity fluctuations aligns with experimental results, confirming the turbulent nature of the flow. Active control, implemented through imposed shear-rate modulations, shows promise for managing turbulence. Slow modulations induce complex behaviours, while fast modulations suppress turbulence. The state diagram of Weissenberg and Deborah numbers highlights the transition to turbulence and suggests an effective critical Weissenberg number to approximate the transition line. In three-dimensional von Kármán flow, elastic turbulence exhibits a subcritical transition, marked by bistable behaviour and hysteresis. Flow resistance and order parameters increase significantly, confirming turbulence. Active control applied here reduces turbulence and relaminarises the flow, mirroring results from the Taylor-Couette system. These findings underscore the potential of controlling elastic turbulence to optimise fluid mixing and stability in viscoelastic systems.
Zapraszamy do sali 1.40, ul. Pasteura 5 o godzinie 09:30

Wojciech Góźdź (Institute of Physical Chemistry, PAS)
The influence of regularly distributed disk-like obstacles on the motionof self-propelled particles is investigated within the framework of the Vicsek model. We focus on systems with a large number of self-propelled particles that form ordered structures such as traveling bands. The obstacles are arranged in a square lattice. We investigate the influence of their size and their separation on the formation and stability of ordered patterns of moving particles. We have discovered new structures stabilized by different arrangements of obstacles.