Nonreciprocal model swimmer at intermediate Reynolds numbers
Hong Nguyen, Daphne Klotsa

TL;DR
This study investigates a simple nonreciprocal 2D swimmer model performing metachronal swimming at intermediate Reynolds numbers, revealing complex speed behavior and underlying fluid dynamics mechanisms that differ from reciprocal swimmers.
Contribution
The paper introduces a computational model of metachronal swimming at intermediate Reynolds numbers, highlighting nonmonotonic speed dependence and new insights into propulsion mechanisms.
Findings
Swim speed peaks around Re ≈ 1
Speed shows a flat minimum between Re=20-30
Distinct motility mechanisms emerge with increasing inertia
Abstract
Metachronal swimming, the sequential beating of limbs with a small phase lag, is observed in many organisms at various scales, but has been studied mostly in the limits of high or low Reynolds numbers. Motivated by the swimming of brine shrimp, a mesoscale organism that operates at intermediate Reynolds numbers, we computationally studied a simple nonreciprocal 2D model that performs metachronal swimming. Our swimmer is composed of two pairs of paddles beating with a phase difference that are symmetrically attached to the sides of a flat body. We numerically solved the Navier-Stokes equations and used the immersed boundary method to model the interactions between the fluid and swimmer. To investigate the effect of inertia and geometry, we performed simulations varying the paddle spacing and the Reynolds numbers in the range . In all cases, we observed back-and-forth…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Biomimetic flight and propulsion mechanisms · Lattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies
