Numerical investigation of the formation and stability of homogeneous pairs of soft particles in inertial microfluidics
Benjamin Owen, Timm Krueger

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to explore how soft particles form and stabilize in microfluidic flow, revealing new behaviors influenced by particle softness and initial positions, with implications for microfluidic applications.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed numerical analysis of soft particle pair formation and stability in inertial microfluidics, highlighting the role of particle softness and initial conditions.
Findings
Soft particles are more likely to form stable pairs.
Lateral position determines pair stability.
Damped oscillations occur during pair formation.
Abstract
We investigate the formation and stability of a pair of identical soft capsules in channel flow under mild inertia. We employ a combination of the lattice Boltzmann, finite element and immersed boundary methods to simulate the elastic particles in flow. Validation tests show excellent agreement with numerical results obtained by other research groups. Our results reveal new trajectory types that have not been observed for pairs of rigid particles. While particle softness increases the likelihood of a stable pair forming, the pair stability is determined by the lateral position of the particles. A key finding is that stabilisation of the axial distance occurs after lateral migration of the particles. During the later phase of pair formation, particles undergo damped oscillations that are independent of initial conditions. These damped oscillations are driven by a strong hydrodynamic…
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