Hydrodynamic instabilities and collective dynamics in activity-balanced pusher-puller mixtures
Bryce Palmer, Wen Yan, Tong Gao

TL;DR
This study uses computational models and simulations to analyze the hydrodynamic instabilities and collective behaviors in binary mixtures of pushers and pullers, revealing complex multiscale dynamics even in activity-balanced suspensions.
Contribution
It introduces a continuum kinetic model and detailed simulations to uncover hydrodynamic instabilities in activity-balanced pusher-puller mixtures, advancing understanding of multiscale microorganism dynamics.
Findings
Collective dynamics occur even in activity-balanced suspensions.
Finite-wavelength hydrodynamic instabilities are identified.
Distinct density fluctuations and correlated motions are observed.
Abstract
Microorganisms living in microfluidic environments often form multi-species swarms, where they can leverage collective motions to achieve enhanced transport and spreading. Nevertheless, there is a general lack of physical understandings of the origins of the multiscale unstable dynamics observed within these systems. Here, we build a computational model to study binary suspensions of rear- and front-actuated microswimmers, or respectively the so-called "pusher" and "puller" particles, that have different populations and swimming speeds. We perform direct particle simulations to reveal that collective system dynamics are possible even in the scenario of an "activity-balanced" mixture, which produces near zero mean extra stress. We first construct a continuum kinetic model to describe the initial transient period when the system is near uniform isotropy and then perform linear stability…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Polymer Surface Interaction Studies
