Arbitrary Lagrangian--Eulerian finite element method for lipid membranes
An arbitrary Lagrangian--Eulerian finite element method and numerical implementation for curved and deforming lipid membranes is presented here. The membrane surface is endowed with a mesh whose in-plane motion need not depend on the in-plane flow of lipids. Instead, in-plane mesh dynamics can be sp...
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Zusammenfassung: | An arbitrary Lagrangian--Eulerian finite element method and numerical
implementation for curved and deforming lipid membranes is presented here. The
membrane surface is endowed with a mesh whose in-plane motion need not depend
on the in-plane flow of lipids. Instead, in-plane mesh dynamics can be
specified arbitrarily. A new class of mesh motions is introduced, where the
mesh velocity satisfies the dynamical equations of a user-specified
two-dimensional material. A Lagrange multiplier constrains the out-of-plane
membrane and mesh velocities to be equal, such that the mesh and material
always overlap. An associated numerical inf--sup instability ensues, and is
removed by adapting established techniques in the finite element analysis of
fluids. In our implementation, the aforementioned Lagrange multiplier is
projected onto a discontinuous space of piecewise linear functions. The new
mesh motion is compared to established Lagrangian and Eulerian formulations by
investigating a preeminent numerical benchmark of biological significance: the
pulling of a membrane tether from a flat patch, and its subsequent lateral
translation. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2412.07596 |