Actively deforming porous media in an incompressible fluid: a variational approach
Tagir Farkhutdinov, Fran\c{c}ois Gay-Balmaz, Vakhtang Putkaradze

TL;DR
This paper develops a variational framework to model the dynamics of actively deforming porous media filled with incompressible fluid, with applications to biological organisms and their self-propulsion mechanisms.
Contribution
It extends existing passive porous media models to include active, muscle-driven deformation in incompressible fluids, providing equations suitable for biological applications.
Findings
Derived equations of motion for active porous media with incompressible fluid.
Formulated coupled telegraph-like equations for numerical simulations.
Showed potential for self-propulsion through muscle stress waves.
Abstract
Many parts of biological organisms are comprised of deformable porous media. The biological media is both pliable enough to deform in response to an outside force and can deform by itself using the work of an embedded muscle. For example, the recent work (Ludeman et al., 2014) has demonstrated interesting 'sneezing' dynamics of a freshwater sponge, when the sponge contracts and expands to clear itself from surrounding polluted water. We derive the equations of motion for the dynamics of such an active porous media (i.e., a deformable porous media that is capable of applying a force to itself with internal muscles), filled with an incompressible fluid. These equations of motion extend the earlier derived equation for a passive porous media filled with an incompressible fluid. We use a variational approach with a Lagrangian written as the sum of terms representing the kinetic and…
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