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Akihiko Matsuyama

Bio: Akihiko Matsuyama is an academic researcher from Fukuoka Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liquid crystal & Materials science. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 1730 citations.

Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the story of the recent developments and the future perspectives in physics of liquid crystals, especially focusing on the contributions by Japanese research groups for the last decade, and present new subjects unmentioned in the book.
Abstract: Over the 100 years since its discovery, liquid crystals have been the intriguing subject for both academia and industries. The textbook of de Gennes The Physics of Liquid Crystals published in 1974 is still the bible for many LC researchers, but new subjects unmentioned in the book have also risen for these years. This chapter describes the story of the recent developments and the future perspectives in physics of liquid crystals, especially focusing on the contributions by Japanese research groups for the last decade.

2,005 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , a mean-field theory was introduced to describe uniaxial and biaxia-biaxial nematic phases in binary mixtures of banana-shaped molecules.
Abstract: Abstract We introduce a mean-field theory to describe uniaxial and biaxial nematic phases in binary mixtures of banana-shaped molecules. We extend our previous theory for pure banana-shaped molecules to the binary mixtures and calculate phase diagrams on the temperature-concentration plane. We predict uniaxial-biaxial nematic phase transitions and Landau points in the binary mixtures. The biaxial nematic phases of banana-shaped molecules are promoted by mixing the two components with different bend angles.
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the photopolymerization-induced phase separation (PPIPS) was studied, and the authors found that the molecules were nonuniformly more and less mobile in response to temperature as PPIPS progressed.
Abstract: Molecular interactions between liquid crystals (LCs) and reactive mesogens (RMs) at temperatures across the phase transition regions were comprehensively studied during photopolymerization-induced phase separation (PPIPS) beginning with raw mixtures until the formation of polymer network liquid crystals (PNLCs). Then, the molecules were found to be nonuniformly more and less mobile in response to temperature as PPIPS progressed. Optical birefringence and infrared absorption were carefully measured throughout PPIPS, using 4-cyano-4'-hexylbiphenyl (6CB) and 1,4bis-[4-(3-acryloyloxypropyloxy) benzoyloxy]-2-methylbenzene (RM257) as typical LCs and RMs. Microscopic views of thermoresponsive changes in the molecular orientation order of both LCs and RMs were obtained: LCs and RMs in raw mixtures interacted with one another but uniformly transformed their molecular orientation. Such interactions continuously change to become nonuniform with progress in PPIPS. At the incipient stages of PPIPS, RMs, which are polymerized but not completely networked, inhibit LCs from changing their molecular orientation and vice versa. As PPIPS progresses, some LCs become more mobile and some less mobile owing to RM constraints. The domain configuration of the submicrometer phase separation affects the thermoresponsive mobility of LCs and RMs, that is, LCs become more mobile in LC-richer areas. The quantitative knowledge here provides comprehensive insight that LCs and RMs are mutually constrained and that such interactive behavior varies nonuniformly as PPIPS progresses.
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors theoretically study nematic-isotropic phase transitions and phase separations in aqueous rod-like polymer solutions, such as rigid DNA (or rodlike polymer) in water.
Abstract: We theoretically study nematic-isotropic phase transitions and phase separations in aqueous rodlike polymer solutions, such as rigid DNA (or rodlike polymer) in water. By taking into the hydrogen bonding between a rodlike polymer and solvent molecules, we predict novel phase diagrams, such as overhang-type coexistence curves with isotropic-nematic (I+N) phase separations and re-entrant I+N separations. We demonstrate that the hydrogen bonding between molecules of different components stabilises the nematic phase at lower polymer concentrations and temperatures.

Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the concept of rogue waves, which is the name given by oceanographers to isolated large amplitude waves, that occur more frequently than expected for normal, Gaussian distributed, statistical events.

851 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combine experiments, particle simulations, and continuum theory to identify the statistical properties of self-sustained meso-scale turbulence in active systems, and propose a minimal continuum model for incompressible bacterial flow.
Abstract: Turbulence is ubiquitous, from oceanic currents to small-scale biological and quantum systems. Self-sustained turbulent motion in microbial suspensions presents an intriguing example of collective dynamical behavior among the simplest forms of life and is important for fluid mixing and molecular transport on the microscale. The mathematical characterization of turbulence phenomena in active nonequilibrium fluids proves even more difficult than for conventional liquids or gases. It is not known which features of turbulent phases in living matter are universal or system-specific or which generalizations of the Navier–Stokes equations are able to describe them adequately. Here, we combine experiments, particle simulations, and continuum theory to identify the statistical properties of self-sustained meso-scale turbulence in active systems. To study how dimensionality and boundary conditions affect collective bacterial dynamics, we measured energy spectra and structure functions in dense Bacillus subtilis suspensions in quasi-2D and 3D geometries. Our experimental results for the bacterial flow statistics agree well with predictions from a minimal model for self-propelled rods, suggesting that at high concentrations the collective motion of the bacteria is dominated by short-range interactions. To provide a basis for future theoretical studies, we propose a minimal continuum model for incompressible bacterial flow. A detailed numerical analysis of the 2D case shows that this theory can reproduce many of the experimentally observed features of self-sustained active turbulence.

803 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reviews static and dynamic interfacial effects in magnetism, focusing on interfacially-driven magnetic effects and phenomena associated with spin-orbit coupling and intrinsic symmetry breaking at interfaces, identifying the most exciting new scientific results and pointing to promising future research directions.
Abstract: This article reviews static and dynamic interfacial effects in magnetism, focusing on interfacially-driven magnetic effects and phenomena associated with spin-orbit coupling and intrinsic symmetry breaking at interfaces. It provides a historical background and literature survey, but focuses on recent progress, identifying the most exciting new scientific results and pointing to promising future research directions. It starts with an introduction and overview of how basic magnetic properties are affected by interfaces, then turns to a discussion of charge and spin transport through and near interfaces and how these can be used to control the properties of the magnetic layer. Important concepts include spin accumulation, spin currents, spin transfer torque, and spin pumping. An overview is provided to the current state of knowledge and existing review literature on interfacial effects such as exchange bias, exchange spring magnets, spin Hall effect, oxide heterostructures, and topological insulators. The article highlights recent discoveries of interface-induced magnetism and non-collinear spin textures, non-linear dynamics including spin torque transfer and magnetization reversal induced by interfaces, and interfacial effects in ultrafast magnetization processes.

758 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the physics aspects of the new research thrusts, in which liquid crystals often meet other types of soft condensed matter, such as polymers and colloidal nano- or microparticle dispersions.

587 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Apr 2017-Nature
TL;DR: A mechanism for apoptotic cell extrusion is proposed: spontaneously formed topological defects in epithelia govern cell fate, and the ability to control extrusion hotspots by geometrically inducing defects through microcontact printing of patterned monolayers is demonstrated.
Abstract: Epithelial tissues (epithelia) remove excess cells through extrusion, preventing the accumulation of unnecessary or pathological cells. The extrusion process can be triggered by apoptotic signalling, oncogenic transformation and overcrowding of cells. Despite the important linkage of cell extrusion to developmental, homeostatic and pathological processes such as cancer metastasis, its underlying mechanism and connections to the intrinsic mechanics of the epithelium are largely unexplored. We approach this problem by modelling the epithelium as an active nematic liquid crystal (that has a long range directional order), and comparing numerical simulations to strain rate and stress measurements within monolayers of MDCK (Madin Darby canine kidney) cells. Here we show that apoptotic cell extrusion is provoked by singularities in cell alignments in the form of comet-shaped topological defects. We find a universal correlation between extrusion sites and positions of nematic defects in the cell orientation field in different epithelium types. The results confirm the active nematic nature of epithelia, and demonstrate that defect-induced isotropic stresses are the primary precursors of mechanotransductive responses in cells, including YAP (Yes-associated protein) transcription factor activity, caspase-3-mediated cell death, and extrusions. Importantly, the defect-driven extrusion mechanism depends on intercellular junctions, because the weakening of cell-cell interactions in an α-catenin knockdown monolayer reduces the defect size and increases both the number of defects and extrusion rates, as is also predicted by our model. We further demonstrate the ability to control extrusion hotspots by geometrically inducing defects through microcontact printing of patterned monolayers. On the basis of these results, we propose a mechanism for apoptotic cell extrusion: spontaneously formed topological defects in epithelia govern cell fate. This will be important in predicting extrusion hotspots and dynamics in vivo, with potential applications to tissue regeneration and the suppression of metastasis. Moreover, we anticipate that the analogy between the epithelium and active nematic liquid crystals will trigger further investigations of the link between cellular processes and the material properties of epithelia.

556 citations