Physical limits to sensing material properties
Abstract
Constitutive relations describe how materials respond to external stimuli such as forces. All materials respond heterogeneously at small scales, which limits what a localized sensor can discern about the global constitution of a material. In this paper, we quantify the limits of such constitutional sensing by determining the optimal measurement protocols for sensors embedded in disordered media. For an elastic medium, we find that the least fractional uncertainty with which a sensor can determine a material constant λ0 is approximately equation* δ λ0λ0 ( λ λ02 )1/2 ( d a )D/2 ( a )D/2 equation* for a d , λ0 λ1/2, and D>1, where a is the size of the sensor, d is its spatial resolution, is the correlation length of fluctuations in the material constant, λ is the local variability of the material constant, and D is the dimension of the medium. Our results reveal how one can construct microscopic devices capable of sensing near these physical limits, e.g. for medical diagnostics. We show how our theoretical framework can be applied to an experimental system by estimating a bound on the precision of cellular mechanosensing in a biopolymer network.
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