Anisotropic diffusion of ellipsoidal tracers in microswimmer suspensions
Henrik Nordanger, Alexander Morozov, Joakim Stenhammar

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale simulations to explore how ellipsoidal tracers move in microswimmer suspensions, revealing anisotropic diffusion behaviors and non-Gaussian displacement distributions that differ from spherical tracers.
Contribution
It provides new insights into anisotropic tracer dynamics in active suspensions, highlighting the limited impact of swimmer correlations on rotational diffusivity and challenging existing hydrodynamic explanations.
Findings
Translational diffusivity is higher along the ellipsoid's major axis in pusher suspensions.
Rotational diffusivity is less affected by swimmer correlations than translational diffusivity.
Short-time displacements exhibit non-Gaussian, ballistic behavior.
Abstract
Tracer particles immersed in suspensions of biological microswimmers such as E. coli or C. reinhardtii display phenomena unseen in conventional equilibrium systems, including strongly enhanced diffusivity relative to the Brownian value and non-Gaussian displacement statistics. In dilute, 3-dimensional suspensions, these phenomena have typically been explained by the hydrodynamic advection of point tracers by isolated microswimmers, while, at higher concentrations, correlations between pusher microswimmers such as E. coli can increase the effective diffusivity even further. Anisotropic tracers in active suspensions can be expected to exhibit even more complex behaviour than spherical ones, due to the presence of a nontrivial translation-rotation coupling. Using large-scale lattice Boltzmann simulations of model microswimmers described by extended force dipoles, we study the motion of…
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