Object Transport by a Confined Active Suspension
Jonathan B. Freund

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to explore how a neutrally buoyant object behaves in an active suspension confined in a circular container, revealing mechanisms for transport, confinement, and flow control based on activity strength.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of object dynamics in active suspensions, highlighting new phenomena like long-range transport and activity-dependent confinement.
Findings
Object can attract or repel from container wall depending on activity.
Persistent propagating behavior enables long-range transport.
Flow ceases when object mobility diminishes near the wall.
Abstract
Numerical simulations in two space dimensions are used to examine the dynamics, transport, and equilibrium behaviors of a neutrally buoyant circular object immersed in an active suspension within a larger closed circular container. The continuum model of Gao et al. (Phys. Rev. Fluids, 2017) represents the suspension of non-interacting, immotile, extensor-type microscopic agents that have a direction and strength and align in response to strain rate. Such a suspension is well known to be unstable above an activity strength threshold, which depends upon the length scale of the confinement. Introducing the object leads to additional phenomenology. It can confine fluid between it and the container wall, which suppresses local suspension activity. However, its motion also correlates strain rates near its surface with a concomitant correlated active-stress response. Depending on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Sports Dynamics and Biomechanics · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
