Virus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells in the nano- to micrometer size range. Virus capsids are particularly interesting since they have to sustain large internal pressures while encapsulating and protecting the viral DNA. We therefore study the mechanical properties of crystalline shells of icosahedral symmetry on a substrate under a uniaxial applied force by computer simulations. We predict the elastic response for small deformations, and the buckling transitions at large deformations. Both are found to depend strongly on the number of elementary building blocks N (the capsomers in the case of viral shells), the Föppl-von Kármán number gamma (which characterizes the relative importance ...
Viruses are known to tolerate wide ranges of pH and salt conditions and to withstand internal pressu...
Minimal energy shapes of closed, elastic shells with twelve pentagonal disclinations introduced in o...
AbstractThe mechanical properties of viral shells are crucial for viral assembly and infection. To s...
AbstractVirus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells ...
AbstractVirus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells ...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to ...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to...
Viruses are submicroscopic biological entities that need to infect a host cell in order to replicate...
Viruses are submicroscopic biological entities that need to infect a host cell in order to replicate...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to...
The current rapid growth in the use of nanosized particles is fueled in part by our increased unders...
Viruses are nanosized, genome-filled protein containers with remarkable thermodynamic and mechanical...
Virus capsids are protein shells that protect the virus genome, and determination of their mechanica...
A coarse-grained model is used to study the mechanical response of 35 virus capsids of symmetries T ...
AbstractA series of recent nanoindentation experiments on the protein shells (capsids) of viruses ha...
Viruses are known to tolerate wide ranges of pH and salt conditions and to withstand internal pressu...
Minimal energy shapes of closed, elastic shells with twelve pentagonal disclinations introduced in o...
AbstractThe mechanical properties of viral shells are crucial for viral assembly and infection. To s...
AbstractVirus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells ...
AbstractVirus capsids and crystalline surfactant vesicles are two examples of self-assembled shells ...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to ...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to...
Viruses are submicroscopic biological entities that need to infect a host cell in order to replicate...
Viruses are submicroscopic biological entities that need to infect a host cell in order to replicate...
Viruses are an important subject to biological research. In particular their astonishing ability to...
The current rapid growth in the use of nanosized particles is fueled in part by our increased unders...
Viruses are nanosized, genome-filled protein containers with remarkable thermodynamic and mechanical...
Virus capsids are protein shells that protect the virus genome, and determination of their mechanica...
A coarse-grained model is used to study the mechanical response of 35 virus capsids of symmetries T ...
AbstractA series of recent nanoindentation experiments on the protein shells (capsids) of viruses ha...
Viruses are known to tolerate wide ranges of pH and salt conditions and to withstand internal pressu...
Minimal energy shapes of closed, elastic shells with twelve pentagonal disclinations introduced in o...
AbstractThe mechanical properties of viral shells are crucial for viral assembly and infection. To s...