Prof. Julien Tailleur

Associate Professor of Physics

Primary DLC

Department of Physics

MIT Room: 6C-435

Areas of Interest and Expertise

Biophysics
Condensed Matter Theory

Research Summary

The research of Professor Julien Tailleur focuses on the emerging properties of active materials, which encompass systems made of large assemblies of units able to exert propelling forces on their environment. From molecular motors to cells and animal groups, active systems are found at all scales in nature. Over the past two decades, chemists and physicists have been able to engineer synthetic active systems by motorizing microscopic inert particles, hence paving the way towards new classes of smart materials.

Tailleur develops new theoretical methods in non-equilibrium statistical mechanics to predict the emerging behaviors of active systems starting from their microscopic descriptions. In particular, Tailleur and co-workers have discovered how condensed active matter may emerge in the absence of attractive interactions through a mechanism called motility-induced phase separation. Tailleur has also made important contributions to the understanding of the mechanical properties of active systems and of their ability to undergo collective motion.

The current focus of Tailleur’s research combines the development of generic theoretical frameworks to describe active systems with their applications to the study of (micro)biological systems.

Recent Work