The optimal elastic flagellum
Saverio E. Spagnolie, Eric Lauga

TL;DR
This paper derives the shape of an optimal elastic flagellum for efficient low-Reynolds number swimming by balancing hydrodynamics, elastic energy, and internal dissipation, revealing shapes that outperform biological counterparts.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive energy model including elastic and viscous costs to analytically and numerically determine optimal flagellum shapes for propulsion.
Findings
Optimal flagellum shapes depend on a balance between bending and rotational costs.
The derived waveforms show a bias towards half-integer wave-numbers.
Final efficiencies exceed 6%, higher than typical biological cells.
Abstract
Motile eukaryotic cells propel themselves in viscous fluids by passing waves of bending deformation down their flagella. An infinitely long flagellum achieves a hydrodynamically optimal low-Reynolds number locomotion when the angle between its local tangent and the swimming direction remains constant along its length. Optimal flagella therefore adopt the shape of a helix in three dimensions (smooth) and that of a sawtooth in two dimensions (non-smooth). Physically, biological organisms (or engineered micro-swimmers) must expend internal energy in order to produce the waves of deformation responsible for the motion. Here we propose a physically-motivated derivation of the optimal flagellum shape. We determine analytically and numerically the shape of the flagellar wave which leads to the fastest swimming while minimizing an appropriately-defined energetic expenditure. Our novel approach…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks
