180 research outputs found
Rheology of gelling polymers in the Zimm model
In order to study rheological properties of gelling systems in dilute
solution, we investigate the viscosity and the normal stresses in the Zimm
model for randomly crosslinked monomers. The distribution of cluster topologies
and sizes is assumed to be given either by Erd\H os-R\'enyi random graphs or
three-dimensional bond percolation. Within this model the critical behaviour of
the viscosity and of the first normal stress coefficient is determined by the
power-law scaling of their averages over clusters of a given size with .
We investigate these Mark--Houwink like scaling relations numerically and
conclude that the scaling exponents are independent of the hydrodynamic
interaction strength. The numerically determined exponents agree well with
experimental data for branched polymers. However, we show that this traditional
model of polymer physics is not able to yield a critical divergence at the gel
point of the viscosity for a polydisperse dilute solution of gelation clusters.
A generally accepted scaling relation for the Zimm exponent of the viscosity is
thereby disproved.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Generalized Helmholtz-Kirchhoff model for two dimensional distributed vortex motion
The two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations are rewritten as a system of
coupled nonlinear ordinary differential equations. These equations describe the
evolution of the moments of an expansion of the vorticity with respect to
Hermite functions and of the centers of vorticity concentrations. We prove the
convergence of this expansion and show that in the zero viscosity and zero core
size limit we formally recover the Helmholtz-Kirchhoff model for the evolution
of point-vortices. The present expansion systematically incorporates the
effects of both viscosity and finite vortex core size. We also show that a
low-order truncation of our expansion leads to the representation of the flow
as a system of interacting Gaussian (i.e. Oseen) vortices which previous
experimental work has shown to be an accurate approximation to many important
physical flows [9]
The short-time self-diffusion coefficient of a sphere in a suspension of rigid rods
The short--time self diffusion coefficient of a sphere in a suspension of
rigid rods is calculated in first order in the rod volume fraction. For low rod
concentrations the correction to the Einstein diffusion constant of the sphere
is a linear function of the rod volume fraction with the slope proportional to
the equilibrium averaged mobility diminution trace of the sphere interacting
with a single freely translating and rotating rod. The two--body hydrodynamic
interactions are calculated using the so--called bead model in which the rod is
replaced by a stiff linear chain of touching spheres. The interactions between
spheres are calculated numerically using the multipole method. Also an
analytical expression for the diffusion coefficient as a function of the rod
aspect ratio is derived in the limit of very long rods. We show that in this
limit the correction to the Einstein diffusion constant does not depend on the
size of the tracer sphere. The higher order corrections depending on the
applied model are computed numerically. An approximate expression is provided,
valid for a wide range of aspect ratios.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Analytic results for the three-sphere swimmer at low Reynolds number
The simple model of a low Reynolds number swimmer made from three spheres
that are connected by two arms is considered in its general form and analyzed.
The swimming velocity, force--velocity response, power consumption, and
efficiency of the swimmer are calculated both for general deformations and also
for specific model prescriptions. The role of noise and coherence in the stroke
cycle is also discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Direct measurement of the flow field around swimming microorganisms
Swimming microorganisms create flows that influence their mutual interactions
and modify the rheology of their suspensions. While extensively studied
theoretically, these flows have not been measured in detail around any
freely-swimming microorganism. We report such measurements for the microphytes
Volvox carteri and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The minute ~0.3% density excess
of V. carteri over water leads to a strongly dominant Stokeslet contribution,
with the widely-assumed stresslet flow only a correction to the subleading
source dipole term. This implies that suspensions of V. carteri have features
similar to suspensions of sedimenting particles. The flow in the region around
C. reinhardtii where significant hydrodynamic interaction is likely to occur
differs qualitatively from a "puller" stresslet, and can be described by a
simple three-Stokeslet model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Brownian Dynamics of a Sphere Between Parallel Walls
We describe direct imaging measurements of a colloidal sphere's diffusion
between two parallel surfaces. The dynamics of this deceptively simple
hydrodynamically coupled system have proved difficult to analyze. Comparison
with approximate formulations of a confined sphere's hydrodynamic mobility
reveals good agreement with both a leading-order superposition approximation as
well as a more general all-images stokeslet analysis.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, REVTeX with PostScript figure
Noisy swimming at low Reynolds numbers
Small organisms (e.g., bacteria) and artificial microswimmers move due to a
combination of active swimming and passive Brownian motion. Considering a
simplified linear three-sphere swimmer, we study how the swimmer size regulates
the interplay between self-driven and diffusive behavior at low Reynolds
number. Starting from the Kirkwood-Smoluchowski equation and its corresponding
Langevin equation, we derive formulas for the orientation correlation time, the
mean velocity and the mean square displacement in three space dimensions. The
validity of the analytical results is illustrated through numerical
simulations. Tuning the swimmer parameters to values that are typical of
bacteria, we find three characteristic regimes: (i) Brownian motion at small
times, (ii) quasi-ballistic behavior at intermediate time scales, and (iii)
quasi-diffusive behavior at large times due to noise-induced orientation
flipping. Our analytical results can be useful for a better quantitative
understanding of optimal foraging strategies in bacterial systems, and they can
help to construct more efficient artificial microswimmers in fluctuating
fluids.Comment: minor changes/additions in the text, references added/updated, to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Director configuration of planar solitons in nematic liquid crystals
The director configuration of disclination lines in nematic liquid crystals
in the presence of an external magnetic field is evaluated. Our method is a
combination of a polynomial expansion for the director and of further
analytical approximations which are tested against a numerical shooting method.
The results are particularly simple when the elastic constants are equal, but
we discuss the general case of elastic anisotropy. The director field is
continuous everywhere apart from a straight line segment whose length depends
on the value of the magnetic field. This indicates the possibility of an
elongated defect core for disclination lines in nematics due to an external
magnetic field.Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, 8 postscript figure
Simple Viscous Flows: from Boundary Layers to the Renormalization Group
The seemingly simple problem of determining the drag on a body moving through
a very viscous fluid has, for over 150 years, been a source of theoretical
confusion, mathematical paradoxes, and experimental artifacts, primarily
arising from the complex boundary layer structure of the flow near the body and
at infinity. We review the extensive experimental and theoretical literature on
this problem, with special emphasis on the logical relationship between
different approaches. The survey begins with the developments of matched
asymptotic expansions, and concludes with a discussion of perturbative
renormalization group techniques, adapted from quantum field theory to
differential equations. The renormalization group calculations lead to a new
prediction for the drag coefficient, one which can both reproduce and surpass
the results of matched asymptotics
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