학술논문

Linear stability of cylindrical, multicomponent vesicles
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter
Mathematical Physics
Physics - Fluid Dynamics
Language
Abstract
Vesicles are important surrogate structures made up of multiple phospholipids and cholesterol distributed in the form of a lipid bilayer. Tubular vesicles can undergo pearling i.e., formation of beads on the liquid thread akin to the Rayleigh-Plateau instability. Previous studies have inspected the effects of surface tension on the pearling instabilities of single-component vesicles. In this study, we perform a linear stability analysis on a multicomponent cylindrical vesicle. We solve the Stokes equations along with the Cahn-Hilliard equations to develop the linearized dynamic equations governing the vesicle shape and surface concentration fields. This helps us show that multicomponent vesicles can undergo pearling, buckling, and wrinkling even in the absence of surface tension, which is a significantly different result from studies on single-component vesicles. This behaviour arises due to the competition between the free energies of phase separation, line tension, and bending for this multi-phospholipid system. We determine the conditions under which axisymmetric and non-axisymmetric modes are dominant, and supplement our results with an energy analysis that shows the sources for these instabilities. We further show that these trends qualitatively match recent experiments.