Locomotion by tangential deformation in a polymeric fluid
Lailai ZHu, Minh Do-Quang, Eric Lauga, Luca Brandt

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to analyze how polymeric fluids affect the locomotion of self-propelled bodies, revealing decreased swimming speeds but increased efficiency due to polymer stresses breaking flow symmetry.
Contribution
First detailed numerical analysis of self-propelled body locomotion in polymeric fluids highlighting effects of Weissenberg number and shape on efficiency and flow profiles.
Findings
Swimming velocity is less in polymeric fluids than in Newtonian fluids.
Polymeric stresses increase swimming efficiency despite higher work done.
Negative elastic wake and flow symmetry breaking are observed behind the swimmer.
Abstract
In several biologically relevant situations, cell locomotion occurs in polymeric fluids with Weissenberg {number} larger than one. Here we present results of three-dimensional numerical simulations for the steady locomotion of a self-propelled body in a model polymeric (Giesekus) fluid at low Reynolds number. Locomotion is driven by steady tangential deformation at the surface of the body (so-called squirming motion). In the case of a spherical squirmer, we show that the swimming velocity is systematically less than that in a Newtonian fluid, with a minimum occurring for Weissenberg numbers of order one. The rate of work done by the swimmer always goes up compared to that occurring in the Newtonian solvent alone, but is always lower than the power necessary to swim in a Newtonian fluid with the same viscosity. The swimming efficiency, defined as the ratio between the rate of work…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Theoretical and Applied Studies in Material Sciences and Geometry · Elasticity and Wave Propagation
