Interface crossing behavior of prolate microswimmers: thermo and hydrodynamics
Rishish Mishra, Harish Pothukuchi, Harinadha Gidituri, Juho Lintuvuori

TL;DR
This study investigates how prolate microswimmers interact with liquid-liquid interfaces, revealing conditions for trapping or crossing based on forces and initial conditions, supported by simulations and experiments.
Contribution
It introduces a combined thermodynamic and hydrodynamic framework to predict microswimmer interface crossing behavior, validated by simulations and bacterial experiments.
Findings
Trapped or crossed depending on initial angle, speed, and interfacial tension.
Critical capillary number predicts trapping, matching simulations and experiments.
Reorientation torque has both hydrodynamic and thermodynamic components.
Abstract
Motivated by recent experiments of motile bacteria crossing liquid-liquid interfaces of isotropic- nematic coexistence (Cheon et al., Soft Matter 20: 7313-7320, 2024), we study the dynamics of prolate microswimmers traversing clean liquid-liquid interfaces. Using large-scale lattice Boltzmann simulations, we observe that neutrally wetting swimmers can be either trapped or cross the in- terface, depending on their initial angle, swimming speed and the interfacial tension between the two fluids. The simulation results are rationalized by considering a competition between interfacial (thermodynamic) and active (hydrodynamic) forces. The swimmers get trapped at the interface due to a thermodynamic trapping force, akin to Pickering effect, when the forces from interfacial tension dominate over the swimming forces. The trapping behavior can be captured by calculating a critical capillary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Advanced Materials and Mechanics
