Squirmer hydrodynamics near a periodic surface topography
Kenta Ishimoto, Eamonn A. Gaffney, David J. Smith

TL;DR
This study investigates how a simple microswimmer, the tangential spherical squirmer, interacts with sinusoidal surface topographies of varying scales, revealing size-dependent guidance and complex dynamics near patterned surfaces.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical approach to analyze squirmer behavior near periodic surface topographies, highlighting the importance of size ratios for directional guidance.
Findings
Guidance occurs when squirmer size matches topography wavelength.
Complex dynamics emerge with misaligned initial configurations.
Surface amplitude variations have limited impact on behavior.
Abstract
The behaviour of microscopic swimmers has previously been explored near large scale confining geometries and in the presence of very small-scale surface roughness. Here we consider an intermediate case of how a simple microswimmer, the tangential spherical squirmer, behaves adjacent to singly- and doubly-periodic sinusoidal surface topographies that spatially oscillate with an amplitude that is an order of magnitude less than the swimmer size and wavelengths within an order of magnitude of this scale. The nearest neighbour regularised Stokeslet method is used for numerical explorations after validating its accuracy for a spherical tangential squirmer that swims stably near a flat surface. The same squirmer is then introduced to the different surface topographies. The key governing factor in the resulting swimming behaviour is the size of the squirmer relative to the surface topography…
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