Physics of Surface Segregation: from Industrial Formulations to Chromatin Organiztion and Biology

Buddhapriya Chakrabarti (U of Sheffield)

Mar 07. 2024, 10:00 — 10:35

When a complex mixture of two or more motile polymers with a surface exposed to the atmosphere is equilibrated, the low molecular weight component preferentially migrates to the surface. This phenomenon termed surface migration plagues many industrial formulations from hygiene care to paint to chocolate. The physics of phase separation and wetting phenomena underpin this fascinating field. I will discuss how a theoretical understanding of surface segregation in synthetic formulation across multiple scales can provide insights into many biophysical processes implicated in cellular behavior such as liquid-liquid phase separation, chromatin organization, viral packing, and rounding behavior observed in dividing cells. 

 

Further Information
Venue:
ESI Boltzmann Lecture Hall
Recordings:
Recording
Associated Event:
Chromatin Modeling: Integrating Mathematics, Physics, and Computation for Advances in Biology and Medicine (Workshop)
Organizer(s):
Anton Goloborodko (IMBA, Vienna)
Tamar Schlick (NYU, New York)
Jan Smrek (U of Vienna)