Trapped-particle microrheology of active suspensions
Zhiwei Peng, John F. Brady

TL;DR
This paper develops a new microrheology model for active suspensions where a probe's position and force can fluctuate, enabling better measurement of local rheological properties in complex fluids.
Contribution
It introduces a generalized microrheology framework allowing simultaneous fluctuation of probe position and force, extending traditional constant-force or constant-velocity models.
Findings
Derived a pair Smoluchowski equation for active particles.
Characterized probe fluctuations in weak and strong trap limits.
Showed the model reduces to classical microrheology models under certain conditions.
Abstract
In microrheology, the local rheological properties such as viscoelasticity of a complex fluid are inferred from the free or forced motion of embedded colloidal probe particles. Theoretical machinery developed for forced-probe microrheology of colloidal suspensions focused on either constant-force (CF) or constant-velocity (CV) probes while in experiments neither the force nor the kinematics of the probe is fixed. More importantly, the constraint of CF or CV introduces a difficulty in the meaningful quantification of the fluctuations of the probe due to a thermodynamic uncertainty relation. It is known that for a Brownian particle trapped in a harmonic potential well, the product of the standard deviations of the trap force and the particle position is in dimensions with being the thermal energy. As a result, if the force (position) is not allowed to fluctuate, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaterial Dynamics and Properties · Rheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies · Blood properties and coagulation
