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Self-induced buckling in hollow microgels

Hollow microgels are elastic polymer shells easily realizable in experiments. Recent works have shown the emergence of buckling events in dilute hollow microgels under the effect of an added osmotic pressure. Here, we perform large-scale simulations to show that these microgels at high enough packing fractions undergo spontaneous symmetry-breaking deformations ranging from single large dents to multiple indentations, even in the absence of any externally applied stress. This self-induced buckling phenomenon is thus solely driven by interparticle crowding. We construct a phase diagram inspired by vesicle shape theories, mapping local curvature metrics as a function of the reduced volume, to quantify these findings, and we also propose ways to observe the occurrence of buckling in experiments. The present results thus rationalize the deformations occurring in suspensions of micro- and nano-scale elastic shells, offering a synthetic analogue to biological ones and allowing direct control on buckling instabilities for potential applications. Beyond materials design, these insights may also help to describe shape regulation in natural systems such as cells and vesicles, where similar deformations are observed.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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