James Feng
Research Classification
Research Interests
Relevant Thesis-Based Degree Programs
Affiliations to Research Centres, Institutes & Clusters
Research Methodology
Recruitment
Complete these steps before you reach out to a faculty member!
- Familiarize yourself with program requirements. You want to learn as much as possible from the information available to you before you reach out to a faculty member. Be sure to visit the graduate degree program listing and program-specific websites.
- Check whether the program requires you to seek commitment from a supervisor prior to submitting an application. For some programs this is an essential step while others match successful applicants with faculty members within the first year of study. This is either indicated in the program profile under "Admission Information & Requirements" - "Prepare Application" - "Supervision" or on the program website.
- Identify specific faculty members who are conducting research in your specific area of interest.
- Establish that your research interests align with the faculty member’s research interests.
- Read up on the faculty members in the program and the research being conducted in the department.
- Familiarize yourself with their work, read their recent publications and past theses/dissertations that they supervised. Be certain that their research is indeed what you are hoping to study.
- Compose an error-free and grammatically correct email addressed to your specifically targeted faculty member, and remember to use their correct titles.
- Do not send non-specific, mass emails to everyone in the department hoping for a match.
- Address the faculty members by name. Your contact should be genuine rather than generic.
- Include a brief outline of your academic background, why you are interested in working with the faculty member, and what experience you could bring to the department. The supervision enquiry form guides you with targeted questions. Ensure to craft compelling answers to these questions.
- Highlight your achievements and why you are a top student. Faculty members receive dozens of requests from prospective students and you may have less than 30 seconds to pique someone’s interest.
- Demonstrate that you are familiar with their research:
- Convey the specific ways you are a good fit for the program.
- Convey the specific ways the program/lab/faculty member is a good fit for the research you are interested in/already conducting.
- Be enthusiastic, but don’t overdo it.
G+PS regularly provides virtual sessions that focus on admission requirements and procedures and tips how to improve your application.
ADVICE AND INSIGHTS FROM UBC FACULTY ON REACHING OUT TO SUPERVISORS
These videos contain some general advice from faculty across UBC on finding and reaching out to a potential thesis supervisor.
Supervision Enquiry
Graduate Student Supervision
Doctoral Student Supervision
Dissertations completed in 2010 or later are listed below. Please note that there is a 6-12 month delay to add the latest dissertations.
Bio-mimicking microfluidic devices have been developed to provide a biologically relevant framework for drug development and toxicological studies. This dissertation aims to describe three case studies in the area of particle and cell transport in bio-mimicking microfluidic devices using finite-element simulations.In the first study, we model the deposition of submicron particles on the epithelial layer of a well-established lung-on-a-chip device. As main results of the study, our simulations predict enhanced submicron particle deposition during physical exercising, subject to opposing effects of elevated air volume and breathing frequency. Moreover, the deposition efficiency varies non-monotonically with particle size, due to the distinct effects of gravitational settling and Brownian motion.In the second case study, we propose a biomechanical model for the passage of a tumor cell through the endothelial cells monolayer. Based on prior in vitro observations, we assume that the tumor cell extends a protrusion between adjacent endothelial cells that adheres to the extracellular matrix. Inside the protrusion, a contractile element composed of stress-fibers and focal-adhesions pulls the nucleus through the endothelial opening. We modeled the chemo-mechanics of the contractile element as well as the elastic deformation and cytosolic flow during transmigration process. Using physiologically reasonable parameters, our model shows that the contractile element can produce a force on the order of 70 nN, which is sufficient to deform the endothelial cells for transmigration. The third project deals with the tenertaxis hypothesis. During immune reaction, leukocytes transmigrate either directly through the body of an individual endothelial cell (the transcellular route) or from the junction between adjacent endothelial cells (the paracellular route). What determines the usage of one route over the other is ambiguous. A recently proposed tenertaxis hypothesis claims that leukocytes choose the path with less mechanical resistance against leukocyte protrusions. Our simulations results show that the required force to breach the endothelium through the transcellular route is greater than paracellular route (22 pN versus 15 pN). Moreover, experiments have demonstrated that manipulation of the relative strength of endothelial resistance can make the transcellular route preferable. Our simulations have confirmed this reversal, and thus tentatively confirmed the hypothesis of tenertaxis.
View record
During tissue morphogenesis forces at the cellular level cause deformation of tissues. Through complex interactions organs are able to develop from epithelial sheets. This work explores the role that sub-cellular organization of signalling proteins, force generation at the cellular level and collective cell behavior have during tissue morphogenesis. Using a class of biophysical model for cellular mechanics known as the vertex model, biological questions concerning two developmental processes are explored. In the first study, a two-dimensional vertex model for drosophila dorsal closure predicts the mechanics of cell oscillation and contraction from the dynamics of the PAR proteins. Using experimental observations of PAR protein dynamics, a system of differential equations models their behavior. By coupling to the vertex model for cellular mechanics, it is shown how the oscillation of cell area results from an intracellular negative feedback loop that involves myosin, an actomyosin regulator, aPKC and Bazooka. In the slow phase, gradual sequestration of apicomedial aPKC by Bazooka causes incomplete disassembly of the actomyosin network over each cycle of oscillation, producing a ratcheting effect. The fast phase of rapid cell and tissue contraction arises when aPKC is no longer able to antagonize the actomyosin network. From experimental observations, the mechanochemical model can account for all major mechanical outcomes of dorsal closure and the transition between three distinct phases. In the second study, a three-dimensional vertex-based model is presented for the study of salivary gland invagination. It is shown how the forces that drive cell shape changes within a flat epithelial sheet, results in the buckling and invagination of a tubular organ. Modelling the epithelial sheet with a 3D model allows for the quantification of how apically patterned forces cause cell shape changes in the basal compartment of the cells. It is shown how cellular constriction leads to the formation of a pit, circumferentially patterned arcs drive the invagination process and the importance of a supracellular actomyosin cable. The model is able to quantify the role that topological transitions have in invagination. The novel 3D model is able to quantify cell mechanical behavior and analyze the effect of different forces during invagination.
View record
This thesis aims to develop and apply modern computational techniques to study the interfacial dynamics involving complex fluids, where the underlying microstructure strongly affects the behaviour of the fluid. In particular, we have chosen two case studies that are significant to the current state of knowledge in specific fluids.In the first problem, we investigate the interaction between a pair of ferrofluid drops subject to rotating magnetic fields. Through direct numerical simulation using a volume-of-fluid method, we classify four different regimes of the ferrofluid drop interaction. We closely examine the planetary motion regime and identify hydrodynamic interaction to be dominant over magnetic dipole interactions. We also discover a new interaction regime called drop locking, which is confirmed in experiments inspired by our study.In the second problem, we first develop a phase-field method to compute elasto-capillary flows of nematic liquid crystals. The new formulation is able to simultaneously achieve a consistent description of structures of topological defects in the material, as well as an accurate recovery of macroscopic interfacial forces including surface tension and liquid crystal anchoring stress. This is made possible by incorporating a hydrodynamic theory of liquid crystals based on a tensor order parameter in a phase-field formalism approximating the sharp-interface limit. Then the method is applied to the drop retraction problem. We characterize a variety of different cases and examine their dynamics. Our numerical results reveal quantitatively that the drop deformation is a hallmark of competition between bulk distortional elasticity of the liquid crystal and surface tension. The new computational framework opens doors to a large class of fundamental problems concerning colloidal interaction in coupled elasto-capillary fields.
View record
For many cells, their biomechanical properties are important to their biofunctions. This thesis contains three computational studies of cellular dynamics under mechanical deformation.When infected by malaria, infected red blood cells (iRBCs) become less deformable and tend to block microcapillaries. Microfluidic channels have been used to investigate the deformability of iRBC at different infection stages. In my first project, I applied a discrete iRBC model to simulate the traverse of iRBCs through a microfluidic channel and investigated the progressive loss of the cell deformability due to three factors: the membrane stiffening, the cell surface-volume ratio reduction, and the parasite growing inside the cell. The results indicate that the growth of the parasite clusters play the most significant role in causing the channel blockage.Recent experiments have investigated the response of neutrophils after passing through microfluidic channels. The results indicate that neutrophils may be activated by mechanical deformation. Mechanical deformation causes disassembly of the cytoskeletal network of the neutrophils, which results in a sudden drop of the cell elastic modulus (termed fluidization). The fluidization is followed by either activation of the neutrophils with formation of pseudopods or uniform recovery of the cytoskeletal network without pseudopod formation. The former only occurs when the neutrophils' transit rate is slow. I proposed a chemo-mechanical model for the fluidization and activation processes, based on the polarization of the Rac protein through a wave-pinning mechanism. The model captures the main features of the experimental observation.The third project investigates the response of smooth muscle cells to transient stretch-compress (SC) and compress-stretch (CS) maneuvers. Prior experimental results indicate that the transient SC maneuver causes a sudden fluidization of the cell while the CS maneuver does not. To understand this asymmetric behavior, I built a biomechanical model to probe the response of stress fibers to the two maneuvers. The model couples the cross-bridge cycle of myosin motors with a viscoelastic Kelvin-Voigt element. Simulation results point to the sensitivity of the myosin detachment rate to tension as the cause for the asymmetric response of the stress fiber to the CS and SC maneuvers.
View record
Using a shear cell device, we have studied four associatedproblems in foam by experiments: Bubble-bubble coalescence insheared two-dimensional foam; lateral migration of a single largebubble in an otherwise monodisperse foam; size segregation ofbubbles in sheared bidisperse foam; and the effect ofnon-Newtonian rheology of foam on lateral migration of bubble. Forbubble-bubble coalescence in sheared two-dimensional foam, weobserved a threshold of shear rate beyond which coalescence ofbubbles happens. The most promising explanation was the modelbased on the centripetal force with qualitative agreement withexperimental results.Next we studied the dynamics of monodisperse foam in the presenceof a single bubble whose size is different from the neighboringbubbles. We reported the lateral migration of a larger singlebubble away from the wall. We also reported thresholds of shearrate and bubble size ratio beyond which migration occurs. In thisstudy we modified the Chan-Leal model and predicted theexperimental trajectories of migrating bubbles.For bidisperse foams, we reported evolution in foam structure to asize segregated structure, in which large bubbles accumulate atthe middle of the gap whereas smaller ones close to walls. Then,we adopted a model based on convection-diffusion equation toaccount for both lateral migration and shear induced diffusion.Finally, we extended the second work by widening the gap ofCouette coaxial cylinder geometry. Similar to the second work, wefound that large bubble migrates laterally to an equilibriumposition close to the inner wall. We believe this new mechanism isthe non-Newtonian feature of foam. We characterized our foam bymeasuring its degree of shear thinning and also estimated itselasticity based on the literature data on foam. Then, we foundout for a shear thinning fluid bubble migrated to position evencloser to the inner wall than in the foam while a bubble in Bogerfluid migrated to a position closer to the outer cylinder.Therefore, for a viscoselastic fluid which has the same featureone would expect to see bubble migration to a position betweenthese two for two fluids.
View record
Using the Cahn-Hilliard diffuse-interface model, I have studied three interfacialdynamic problems for incompressible immiscible two-phase flows. Asthe first problem, capillary instability of a liquid torus is computed. Themain differences between the torus and a straight thread are the presenceof an axial curvature and an external flow field caused by the retraction ofthe torus. We show that the capillary wave initially grows linearly as on astraight thread. The axial curvature decreases the growth rate of the capillarywaves while the external flow enhances it. Breakup depends on thecompetition of two time scales: one for torus retraction and the other forneck pinch-off. The outcome is determined by the initial amplitude of thedisturbance, the thickness of the torus relative to its circumference, and theviscosity ratio.The second problem concerns interfacial dynamics and three-phase contactline motion of wicking through micropores of two types of geometries:axisymmetric tubes with contractions and expansions of the cross section,and two-dimensional planar channels with a Y-shaped bifurcation. Resultsshow that the liquid meniscus undergoes complex deformation during itspassage through contraction and expansion. Pinning of the interface at protrudingcorners limits the angle of expansion into which wicking is allowed.Capillary competition between branches downstream of a Y-shaped bifurcationmay result in arrest of wicking in the wider branch.As the third problem, auto-ejection of drops from capillary tubes is studied.This study focuses on two related issues: the critical condition for autoejection,and the role of geometric parameters in the hydrodynamics. Fromanalyzing the dynamics of the meniscus in the straight tube and the nozzle,we develop a criterion for the onset of auto-ejection based on a Weber numberdefined at the exit of the nozzle and an effective length that encompassesthe geometric features of the tube-nozzle combination. In particular, thiscriterion shows that ejection is not possible in straight tubes. With steepercontraction in the nozzle, we predict two additional regimes of interfacialrupture: rapid ejection of multiple droplets and air bubble entrapment.
View record
Recent technological developments in microfluidics and fuel cellshave given special significance to interfacial dynamics in smallpores. Using a diffuse-interface model and a finite-element code,I have simulated three associated problems numerically: gas-liquidflow regimes in micropores; relative permeability for two-phaseflow through a model porous medium; and dynamics of sessile dropsunder the simultaneous action of a wettability gradient and anexternal flow. For two-phase flows in corrugated microchannels driven by apressure drop, a number of flow regimes were observed: gas flow,blockage, liquid flow, bubble-slug flow, droplet flow, annularflow and annular-droplet flow. Some of the regimes are known fromprior studies in macroscopic pipes, but the others are new andspecific to the micropores. Then a map of flow regimes has beenconstructed in the plane of the liquid saturation and the imposedpressure drop. The transitions among certain flow regimes showsignificant hysteresis, largely owing to the pinning of theinterface at sharp corners in the flow conduit. As an extension of the above study, I computed the relativepermeability of a model porous media made of corrugated tubes,using an averaging scheme over a pore-size-distribution of a realporous medium. I discovered that the flow rates vary nonlinearlywith the pressure gradient, and that the extended Darcy's law doesnot hold in general. In the third project, I found that for each prescribed wettinggradient, there is a narrow range for the cross flow within whicha stationary drop can be achieved. The drop motion exhibits stronghysteresis, i.e. sensitivity to initial conditions and forcinghistory. Two drops merge or separate depending on the competitionbetween wettability and external flow. In general, the wettabilitygradient favors catch-up and coalescence while the external flowfavors separation. These numerical simulations have demonstrated that novelinterfacial dynamics can be produced in micropores where capillaryforces and contact line dynamics play more important roles than inlarger spatial dimensions. The numerical results may serve asguidelines to future experiments and technological development inmicrofluidics and lab-on-chip devices.
View record
The connection between certain human diseases and changes in the mechanical properties of living cells is well established, e.g. in the cases of malaria and cancer. However, the mechanism for the mechanical modifications, which tend to facilitate the pathogenesis of such diseases, is not always clear. For instance, the overall loss of deformability of malaria-infected red blood cells (RBCs) corresponds to a 10-fold increase in the rigidity of the cell membrane. On the other hand, micropipette aspiration has only measured a 3-fold increase in the elastic modulus. In this thesis, a particle-based model is developed to explore the interplay between the underlying microstructures and the behavior of the cell as a whole. The research consists of three related projects. The first project deals with the long-standing problem of Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) method with open boundaries and solid walls. We propose a "rotational pressure-correction scheme" with a consistent pressure boundary condition that leads to a large improvement in accuracy of calculated pressure and the drag coefficient on solid obstacles. The second and third projects concern developing a 2D and then 3D particle-based model for RBCs to explore the parasite-driven changes in malaria-infected RBCs. In our models the cell membrane is replaced by a set of discrete particles connected by linear or nonlinear springs. In addition, a linear bending elasticity is implemented using the deviation of the local curvature from the innate curvature of the biconcave shape of a resting RBC. The cytoplasm and the external liquid are modelled as homogeneous Newtonian fluids, and discretized by particles as in standard SPH solution of the Navier-Stokes equations. The malaria parasite is modelled as an aggregate of particles constrained to rigid-body motion. We argue that the discrepancy in the estimated elastic modulus of the membrane is caused by the presence of the rigid parasite particles inside infected cells, and have carried out numerical simulations to demonstrate this mechanism. Our three-dimensional simulation of RBC stretching tests by optical tweezers accurately demonstrates the compensating effects between the existence of malaria parasites and the elevated stiffness of the membrane on the overall deformability of infected RBC.
View record
Interfacial flows in complex fluids are an important subject, scientifically rich and technologically important. The main scientific attraction comes from the fact that the microstructure of the bulk fluids may evolve during interfacial flow, and thereby generating non-Newtonian stresses that act on the interface. Thus, interfacial motion and conformation of the microstructure are coupled. Such flow situations arise in many industrial applications, including processing of polymer blends, foaming, and emulsification.In this thesis, I describe three projects aimed at exploring interfacial dynamics of viscoelastic polymeric liquids. The first project consists of finite-element simulations of drop deformation in converging flows in an axisymmetric conical geometry. The moving interface is captured using a diffuse-interface model and accurate interfacial resolution is ensured by adaptive refinement of the grid. The drop experiences a predominantly elongational flow. The amount of deformation sustained by the drop depends, besides the geometry and kinematics of the flow, on the rheology of both the drop and the matrix fluids. The second and third projects concern the same process of selective withdrawal, in which stratified layers of immiscible fluids are withdrawn from a tube placed a certain distance from the interface. We have chosen to work with an air-liquid system, with the suction tube embeddedin the Newtonian or viscoelastic liquid. The second project is an experimental study, where we used video recording and imaging processing to analyze how the interfacial deformation is influenced by the non-Newtonian rheology of the liquid. We discover three regimes, subcritical, critical and supercritical. The third project consists of sharp-interface, moving-grid finite-element simulations of selective withdrawal for Newtonian and viscoelastic Giesekus liquids. The experiments and computations are in reasonable agreement.The work of this thesis has led to two main outcomes. The first is a detailed understanding of how viscoelastic stress can lead to unusual and sometimes counter-intuitive effects on interfacialdeformation. The second is a potentially important new method for measuring elongational viscosity of low-viscosity liquids. This is worth further investigation considering the poor performance ofexisting methods.
View record
A diffuse-interface finite-element method has been applied to simulate the flow of two-component rheologically complex fluids. It treats the interfaces as having a finite thickness with a phase-field parameter varying continuously from one phase to the other. Adaptive meshing is applied to produce fine grid near the interface and coarse mesh in the bulk. It leads to accurate resolution of the interface at modest computational costs. An advantage of this method is that topological changes such as interfacial rupture and coalescence happen naturally under a short-range force resembling the van der Waals force. There is no need for manual intervention as in sharp-interface model to effect such event. Moreover, this energy-based formulation easily incorporates complex rheology as long as the free energy of the microstructures is known. The complex fluids considered in this thesis include viscoelastic fluids and nematic liquid crystals. Viscoelasticity is represented by the Oldroyd-B model, derived for a dilute polymer solution as linear elastic dumbbells suspended in a Newtonian solvent. The Leslie-Ericksen model is used for nematic liquid crystals,which features distortional elasticity and viscous anisotropy. The interfacial dynamics of such complex fluids are of both scientific and practical significance. The thesis describes seven computational studies of physically interesting problems. The numerical simulations of monodisperse drop formation in microfluidic devices have reproduced scenarios of jet breakup and drop formation observed in experiments. Parametric studies have shown dripping and jetting regimes for increasing flow rates, and elucidated the effects of flow and rheological parameters on the drop formation process and the final drop size. A simple liquid drop model is used to study the neutrophil, the most common type of white blood cell, transit in pulmonary capillaries. The cell size, viscosity and rheological properties are found to determine the transit time. A compound drop model is also employed to account for the cell nucleus. The other four cases concern drop and bubble dynamics in nematic liquid crystals, as determined by the coupling among interfacial anchoring, bulk elasticity and anisotropic viscosity. In particular, the simulations reproduce unusual bubble shapes seen in experiments, and predict self-assembly of microdroplets in nematic media.
View record
Master's Student Supervision
Theses completed in 2010 or later are listed below. Please note that there is a 6-12 month delay to add the latest theses.
The nucleocapsids of the baculovirus have been observed to undergo intracellular trafficking driven by actin polymerization. Propelled by an actin tail through the cytoplasm, the baculovirus nucleocapsid finds its way to the nucleus of the host cell. Then it docks to the cytoplasmic filaments of the nuclear pore complex (NPC), and manages to enter the nucleus intact. These interesting experimental observations inspired the current research. We first focus on the actin polymerization mechanism and the propulsive force generated at the back of the virus. Then, at the NPC interface, we integrate the mechanism for opening the central channel and passage of the virus. For the first part, using a microscopic approach and implementing an elastic Brownian ratchet model, we suggest a biphasic force-velocity relationship for baculovirus riding on the actin comet tail, which stalls at an external force of around 50 pN. Then, having this force value as the key parameter, we evaluate the idea of mechanical breakthrough into the NPC channel. For this purpose, we model the central channel of the NPC as saturated hydrogel. A mechanical fracture model shows that in order for the actin force to affect a purely mechanical breakthrough, the gel must be exceedingly soft. Although our results do not offer direct support for the hypothesis of a purely mechanical entry, they do not disprove the idea, either. Possibly the homogeneous hydrogel model for the NPC is inadequate, and more complex models (e.g. polymer brushes and forest) need to be examined. It is also possible that the mechanical entry of the virus is aided by biochemical signals that soften or partially remove the NPC barrier.
View record
Publications
- An arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian method for simulating interfacial dynamics between a hydrogel and a fluid (2022)
Journal of Computational Physics, - Particle trapped at the isotropic-nematic liquid crystal interface: Elastocapillary phenomena and drag forces (2022)
Physical Review E, - A mechanical test of the tenertaxis hypothesis for leukocyte diapedesis (2021)
The European Physical Journal E, - A three-dimensional vertex model for Drosophila salivary gland invagination (2021)
Physical Biology, - Long term sedimentation of an elliptic disc subject to an electrostatic field using smoothed particle hydrodynamics method (2021)
International Journal of Multiphase Flow, - Particle rotation speeds up capillary interactions. (2021)
The European physical journal. E, Soft matter, - Phase-field model for elastocapillary flows of liquid crystals (2021)
Physical Review E, - Tear-film breakup: The role of membrane-associated mucin polymers (2021)
Physical Review E, - A biomechanical model for the transendothelial migration of cancer cells (2020)
Physical Biology, - A Rho-GTPase based model explains group advantage in collective chemotaxis of neural crest cells (2020)
Physical Biology, - Boundary conditions at a gel-fluid interface (2020)
Physical Review Fluids, - Drag force on a particle straddling a fluid interface: Influence of interfacial deformations (2020)
The European Physical Journal E, - Modeling of van der Waals force with smoothed particle hydrodynamics: Application to the rupture of thin liquid films (2020)
Applied Mathematical Modelling, - Simulation of nanoparticle transport and adsorption in a microfluidic lung-on-a-chip device (2020)
Biomicrofluidics, - A fate-alternating transitional regime in contracting liquid filaments (2019)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - Dielectrophoretic interaction of circular particles in a uniform electric field (2019)
European Journal of Mechanics - B/Fluids, - Forced dewetting in a capillary tube (2019)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - A model of tear-film breakup with continuous mucin concentration and viscosity profiles (2018)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - A Rho-GTPase based model explains spontaneous collective migration of neural crest cell clusters. (2018)
Developmental biology, - Dynamics of PAR Proteins Explain the Oscillation and Ratcheting Mechanisms in Dorsal Closure (2018)
Biophysical Journal, - Hydrodynamic Interactions Among Bubbles, Drops, and Particles in Non-Newtonian Liquids (2018)
Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics, Vol 50, 50, 505-534 - Interaction of a pair of ferrofluid drops in a rotating magnetic field (2018)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - Modeling cell intercalation during Drosophila germband extension (2018)
Physical Biology, 15 (6) - Asymmetric drop coalescence launches fungal ballistospores with directionality (2017)
Journal of the Royal Society Interface, - Capillary-inertial colloidal catapults upon drop coalescence (2016)
Applied Physics Letters, 109 (1) - Film deposition and transition on a partially wetting plate in dip coating (2016)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 791, 358-383 - Film deposition and transition on a partially wetting plate in dip coating (vol 791, pg 358, 2016) (2016)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - Interfacial dynamics in complex fluids (2016)
Journal of Fluid Science and Technology, - The effect of normal electric field on the evolution of immiscible Rayleigh-Taylor instability (2016)
Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics, 30 (5), 469-483 - A biomechanical model for cell polarization and intercalation during Drosophila germband extension (2015)
Physical Biology, 12 (5) - A Biomechanical Model for Fluidization of Cells under Dynamic Strain (2015)
Biophysical Journal, 108 (1), 43-52 - An incompressible smoothed particle hydrodynamics method for the motion of rigid bodies in fluids (2015)
Journal of Computational Physics, 297, 207-220 - Cell-ECM adhesion coordinates forces required for morphogenesis (2015)
Molecular Biology of the Cell, - MIGRATION OF A RIGID DISC IN COUETTE FLOW SUBJECT TO AN EXTERNAL ELECTRIC FIELD SIMULATED USING ISPH (2015)
Coupled Problems in Science and Engineering VI, - Modeling the Mechanosensitivity of Neutrophils Passing through a Narrow Channel (2015)
Biophysical Journal, 109 (11), 2235-2245 - Self-Propelled Droplet Removal from Hydrophobic Fiber-Based Coalescers (2015)
Physical Review Letters, 115 (7) - Self-propelled sweeping removal of dropwise condensate (2015)
Applied Physics Letters, 106 (22) - Temporal evolution of microstructure and rheology of sheared two-dimensional foams (2015)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 223, 1-8 - The critical pressure for driving a red blood cell through a contracting microfluidic channel (2015)
Theoretical and Applied Mechanics Letters, - An essential morphogenetic role for Integrins in regulating tissue level tensile force by modulation of cell mobility. (2014)
Molecular Biology of the Cell, 25 - Auto-ejection of liquid drops from capillary tubes (2014)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 752, 670-692 - Bubble migration in two-dimensional foam sheared in a wide-gap Couette device: Effects of non-Newtonian rheology (2014)
Journal of Rheology, 58 (6), 1809-1827 - Comment on Machado et al., "Cytoskeletal turnover and myosin contractility drive cell autonomous oscillations in a model of Drosophila dorsal closure"t (2014)
European Physical Journal-Special Topics, 223 (7), 1437-1439 - DESCENT OF A SOLID DISK IN QUIESCENT FLUID SIMULATED USING INCOMPRESSIBLE SMOOTHED PARTICLE HYDRODYNAMICS (2014)
11TH WORLD CONGRESS ON COMPUTATIONAL MECHANICS; 5TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON COMPUTATIONAL MECHANICS; 6TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON COMPUTATIONAL FLUID DYNAMICS, VOLS V - VI, - Motion and coalescence of sessile drops driven by subtrate wetting gradient and external flow (2014)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 746, 214-235 - Numerical simulations of self-propelled jumping upon drop coalescence on non-wetting surfaces (2014)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 752, 39-65 - Self-propelled jumping upon drop coalescence on Leidenfrost surfaces (2014)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 752, 22-38 - A Cell-Level Mechanobiological Model of Drosophila Dorsal Closure (2013)
Biophysical Journal, 104 (2), 477A - Bazooka inhibits aPKC to limit antagonism of actomyosin networks during amnioserosa apical constriction (2013)
Development, 140 (23), 4719-+ - Capillary breakup of a liquid torus (2013)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 717, 281-292 - Occlusion of Micro-Capillaries by Malaria Infected Red Blood Cells (2013)
Biophysical Journal, 104 (2), 150A - Simulation of malaria-infected red blood cells in microfluidic channels: Passage and blockage (2013)
Biomicrofluidics, 7 (4) - Simulations of the breakup of liquid filaments on a partially wetting solid substrate (2013)
Physics of Fluids, 25 (7) - Size Segregation in Sheared Two-Dimensional Polydisperse Foam (2013)
Langmuir, 29 (5), 1370-1378 - A Cell-Level Biomechanical Model of Drosophila Dorsal Closure (2012)
Biophysical Journal, 103 (11), 2265-2274 - A Phase-Field-Based Hybrid Lattice-Boltzmann Finite-Volume Method and Its Application to Simulate Droplet Motion under Electrowetting Control (2012)
Journal of Adhesion Science and Technology, 26 (12-17), 1825-1851 - Anomalous coalescence in sheared two-dimensional foam (2012)
Physical Review E, 85 (6) - How Malaria Parasites Reduce the Deformability of Infected Red Blood Cells (2012)
Biophysical Journal, 103 (1), 1-10 - Phase-field simulations of dynamic wetting of viscoelastic fluids (2012)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 189, 8-13 - Relative permeability for two-phase flow through corrugated tubes as model porous media (2012)
International Journal of Multiphase Flow, 47, 85-93 - Size-Differentiated Lateral Migration of Bubbles in Couette Flow of Two-Dimensional Foam (2012)
Physical Review Letters, 109 (8) - A COMPUTATIONAL MODEL OF CELL POLARIZATION AND MOTILITY COUPLING MECHANICS AND BIOCHEMISTRY (2011)
Multiscale Modeling & Simulation, 9 (4), 1420-1443 - A numerical investigation of the propulsion of water walkers (2011)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 668, 363-383 - Can diffuse-interface models quantitatively describe moving contact lines? (2011)
European Physical Journal-Special Topics, 197 (1), 37-46 - Discussion Notes on "Slip velocity during the flow of a liquid over a solid surface", by E. Ruckenstein (2011)
European Physical Journal-Special Topics, 197 (1), 211 - Hydrodynamic interaction between a pair of bubbles ascending in shear-thinning inelastic fluids (2011)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 166 (1-2), 118-132 - Interfacial flows in corrugated microchannels: Flow regimes, transitions and hysteresis (2011)
International Journal of Multiphase Flow, 37 (10), 1266-1276 - Pressure boundary conditions for computing incompressible flows with SPH (2011)
Journal of Computational Physics, 230 (19), 7473-7487 - Spreading and breakup of a compound drop on a partially wetting substrate (2011)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 682, 415-433 - Wall energy relaxation in the Cahn-Hilliard model for moving contact lines (2011)
Physics of Fluids, 23 (1) - Wicking flow through microchannels (2011)
Physics of Fluids, 23 (12) - 3D phase-field simulations of interfacial dynamics in Newtonian and viscoelastic fluids (2010)
Journal of Computational Physics, 229 (2), 498-511 - Dynamic Simulation of Capillary Breakup of Nematic Fibers: Molecular Orientation and Interfacial Rupture (2010)
Journal of Computational and Theoretical Nanoscience, 7 (4), 683-692 - Selective withdrawal of polymer solutions: Computations (2010)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 165 (15-16), 839-851 - Selective withdrawal of polymer solutions: Experiments (2010)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 165 (15-16), 829-838 - Sharp-interface limit of the Cahn-Hilliard model for moving contact lines (2010)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 645, 279-294 - A particle-based model for the transport of erythrocytes in capillaries (2009)
Chemical Engineering Science, 64 (22), 4488-4497 - Enhanced slip on a patterned substrate due to depinning of contact line (2009)
Physics of Fluids, 21 (10) - Flow patterns in the sedimentation of an elliptical particle (2009)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 625, 249-272 - A general criterion for viscoelastic secondary flow in pipes of noncircular cross section (2008)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 52 (1), 315-332 - Deformation of a compound drop through a contraction in a pressure-driven pipe flow (2008)
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MULTIPHASE FLOW, 34 (1), 102-109 - Dynamic simulation of droplet interaction and self-assembly in a nematic liquid crystal (2008)
LANGMUIR, 24 (7), 3099-3110 - Elastic encapsulation in bicomponent stratified flow of viscoelastic fluids (2008)
Journal of Rheology, 52 (4), 1027-1042 - The nucleation and growth of gas bubbles in a Newtonian fluid: An energetic variational phase field approach (2008)
Moving Interface Problems and Applications in Fluid Dynamics, 466, 95-120 - Viscoelastic effects on drop deformation in a converging pipe flow (2008)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 52 (2), 469-487 - Viscoelastic flow simulation of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) paste extrusion (2008)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 153 (1), 25-33 - A novel low inertia shear flow instability triggered by a chemical reaction (2007)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 19 (8) - An arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian method for simulating bubble growth in polymer foaming (2007)
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS, 226 (2), 2229-2249 - Dynamic evolution of topological defects around drops and bubbles rising in a nematic liquid crystal (2007)
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 99 (23) - Heart-shaped bubbles rising in anisotropic liquids (2007)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 19 (4) - Liquid crystal droplet production in a microfluidic device (2007)
LIQUID CRYSTALS, 34 (7), 861-870 - Rheology and relaxation processes in a melting thermotropic liquid-crystalline polymer (2007)
JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE, 104 (6), 3780-3787 - Simulation of neutrophil deformation and transport in capillaries using newtonian and viscoelastic drop models (2007)
ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 35 (5), 766-780 - Spontaneous shrinkage of drops and mass conservation in phase-field simulations (2007)
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS, 223 (1), 1-9 - The rise of Newtonian drops in a nematic liquid crystal (2007)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 593, 385-404 - A computational study of the coalescence between a drop and an interface in Newtonian and viscoelastic fluids (2006)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 18 (10) - An analytical flow model for PTFE paste through annular dies (2006)
Aiche Journal, 52 (12), 4028-4038 - An experimental study of the coalescence between a drop and an interface in Newtonian and polymeric liquids (2006)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 18 (9) - Constitutive modeling and flow simulation of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) paste extrusion (2006)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 139 (1-2), 44-53 - Dynamic interfacial tension between a thermotropic liquid-crystalline polymer and a flexible polymer (2006)
JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE, 101 (5), 3114-3120 - Formation of simple and compound drops in microfluidic devices (2006)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 18 (9) - Mathematical simulation of muscle cross-bridge cycle and force-velocity relationship (2006)
Biophysical Journal, 91 (10), 3653-3663 - Numerical simulations of jet pinching-off and drop formation using an energetic variational phase-field method (2006)
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS, 218 (1), 417-428 - Partial coalescence between a drop and a liquid-liquid interface (2006)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 18 (5) - Phase-field simulations of interfacial dynamics in viscoelastic fluids using finite elements with adaptive meshing (2006)
JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL PHYSICS, 219 (1), 47-67 - Plasticization effects on bubble growth during polymer foaming (2006)
POLYMER ENGINEERING AND SCIENCE, 46 (1), 97-107 - An energetic variational formulation with phase field methods for interfacial dynamics of complex fluids: Advantages and challenges (2005)
Modeling of Soft Matter, 141, 1-26 - Diffuse-interface simulations of drop coalescence and retraction in viscoelastic fluids (2005)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 129 (3), 163-176 - Extensional viscosity of a thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer measured by thread disintegration method (2005)
POLYMER TESTING, 24 (4), 513-518 - Interfacial forces and Marangoni flow on a nernatic drop retracting in an isotropic fluid (2005)
JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE, 290 (1), 281-288 - Transient drop deformation upon startup of shear in viscoelastic fluids (2005)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 17 (12) - Viscoelastic effects on drop deformation in steady shear (2005)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 540, 427-437 - A diffuse-interface method for simulating two-phase flows of complex fluids (2004)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 515, 293-317 - Dynamic interfacial properties between a flexible-chain polymer and a thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer investigated by an ellipsoidal drop retraction method (2004)
JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE, 94 (4), 1404-1410 - Orientational defects near colloidal particles in a nematic liquid crystal (2004)
JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE, 269 (1), 72-78 - Prediction of bubble growth and size distribution in polymer foaming based on a new heterogeneous nucleation model (2004)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 48 (2), 439-462 - Direct numerical simulation of the sedimentation of solid particles with thermal convection (2003)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 481, 385-411 - Effects of elastic anisotropy on the flow and orientation of sheared nematic liquid crystals (2003)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 47 (4), 1051-1070 - Simulation of the sedimentation of melting solid particles (2003)
International Journal of Multiphase Flow, 29 (5), 751-769 - Stretching of a straight electrically charged viscoelastic jet (2003)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, 116 (1), 55-70 - Orientation of symmetric bodies falling in a second-order liquid at nonzero Reynolds number (2002)
MATHEMATICAL MODELS & METHODS IN APPLIED SCIENCES, 12 (11), 1653-1690 - The shear flow behavior of LCPs based on a generalized Doi model with distortional elasticity (2002)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 102 (2), 361-382 - The stretching of an electrified non-Newtonian jet: A model for electrospinning (2002)
Physics of Fluids, 14 (11), 3912-3926 - Roll cells and disclinations in sheared nematic polymers (2001)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 449, 179-200 - A theory for flowing nematic polymers with orientational distortion (2000)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 44 (5), 1085-1101 - A theory for flowing nematic polymers with orientational distortion (vol 44, pg 1085, 2000) (2000)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 44 (6), 1435 - Transient extension and relaxation of a dilute polymer solution in a four-roll mill (2000)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 90 (1), 117-123 - Pressure-driven channel flows of a model liquid-crystalline polymer (1999)
PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 11 (10), 2821-2835 - Closure approximations for the Doi theory: Which to use in simulating complex flows of liquid-crystalline polymers? (1998)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 42 (5), 1095-1119 - Direct simulation of the motion of solid particles in Couette and Poiseuille flows of viscoelastic fluids (1997)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 343, 73-94 - Numerical simulations of the flow of dilute polymer solutions in a four-roll mill (1997)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 72 (2-3), 187-218 - Simulating complex flows of liquid-crystalline polymers using the Doi theory (1997)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 41 (6), 1317-1335 - A note on the forces that move particles in a second-order fluid (1996)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 64 (2-3), 299-302 - A three-dimensional computation of the force and torque on an ellipsoid settling slowly through a viscoelastic fluid (vol 283, pg 1, 1995) (1996)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 313, 408 - Dynamic simulation of sedimentation of solid particles in an Oldroyd-B fluid (1996)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 63 (1), 63-88 - The motion of a solid sphere suspended by a Newtonian or viscoelastic jet (1996)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 315, 367-385 - The motion of solid particles suspended in viscoelastic liquids under torsional shear (1996)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 324, 199-222 - The negative wake in a second-order fluid (vol 57, pg 313, 1995) (1996)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 63 (2-3), 263 - A 3-DIMENSIONAL COMPUTATION OF THE FORCE AND TORQUE ON AN ELLIPSOID SETTLING SLOWLY THROUGH A VISCOELASTIC FLUID (1995)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 283, 1-16 - A three-dimensional computation of the force and torque on an ellipsoid settling slowly through a viscoelastic fluid (1995)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - DYNAMIC SIMULATION OF THE MOTION OF CAPSULES IN PIPELINES (1995)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 286, 201-227 - THE NEGATIVE WAKE IN A 2ND-ORDER FLUID (1995)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 57 (2-3), 313-320 - The negative wake in a second-order fluid (1995)
Journal of Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics, - THE UNSTEADY MOTION OF SOLID BODIES IN CREEPING FLOWS (1995)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 303, 83-102 - WALL EFFECTS ON THE FLOW OF VISCOELASTIC FLUIDS AROUND A CIRCULAR-CYLINDER (1995)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 60 (2-3), 179-198 - AGGREGATION AND DISPERSION OF SPHERES FALLING IN VISCOELASTIC LIQUIDS (1994)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 54, 45-86 - Direct simulation of initial value problems for the motion of solid bodies in a Newtonian fluid. Part 2. Couette and Poiseuille flows (1994)
Journal of Fluid Mechanics, - DIRECT SIMULATION OF INITIAL-VALUE PROBLEMS FOR THE MOTION OF SOLID BODIES IN A NEWTONIAN FLUID .1. SEDIMENTATION (1994)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 261, 95-134 - DIRECT SIMULATION OF INITIAL-VALUE PROBLEMS FOR THE MOTION OF SOLID BODIES IN A NEWTONIAN FLUID .2. COUETTE AND POISEUILLE FLOWS (1994)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 277, 271-301 - ROD CLIMBING AND NORMAL STRESSES IN HEAVY CRUDE OILS AT LOW SHEARS (1994)
JOURNAL OF RHEOLOGY, 38 (5), 1251-1270 - THE TURNING COUPLES ON AN ELLIPTIC PARTICLE SETTLING IN A VERTICAL CHANNEL (1994)
JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS, 271, 1-16 - ANOMALOUS ROLLING OF SPHERES DOWN AN INCLINED PLANE (1993)
JOURNAL OF NON-NEWTONIAN FLUID MECHANICS, 50 (2-3), 305-329
If this is your researcher profile you can log in to the Faculty & Staff portal to update your details and provide recruitment preferences.