51 research outputs found
The motion of a deforming capsule through a corner
A three-dimensional deformable capsule convected through a square duct with a
corner is studied via numerical simulations. We develop an accelerated boundary
integral implementation adapted to general geometries and boundary conditions.
A global spectral method is adopted to resolve the dynamics of the capsule
membrane developing elastic tension according to the neo-Hookean constitutive
law and bending moments in an inertialess flow. The simulations show that the
trajectory of the capsule closely follows the underlying streamlines
independently of the capillary number. The membrane deformability, on the other
hand, significantly influences the relative area variations, the advection
velocity and the principal tensions observed during the capsule motion. The
evolution of the capsule velocity displays a loss of the time-reversal symmetry
of Stokes flow due to the elasticity of the membrane. The velocity decreases
while the capsule is approaching the corner as the background flow does,
reaches a minimum at the corner and displays an overshoot past the corner due
to the streamwise elongation induced by the flow acceleration in the downstream
branch. This velocity overshoot increases with confinement while the maxima of
the major principal tension increase linearly with the inverse of the duct
width. Finally, the deformation and tension of the capsule are shown to
decrease in a curved corner
Viscous Taylor droplets in axisymmetric and planar tubes: from Bretherton's theory to empirical models
The aim of this study is to derive accurate models for quantities
characterizing the dynamics of droplets of non-vanishing viscosity in
capillaries. In particular, we propose models for the uniform-film thickness
separating the droplet from the tube walls, for the droplet front and rear
curvatures and pressure jumps, and for the droplet velocity in a range of
capillary numbers, , from to and inner-to-outer viscosity
ratios, , from , i.e. a bubble, to high viscosity droplets.
Theoretical asymptotic results obtained in the limit of small capillary number
are combined with accurate numerical simulations at larger . With these
models at hand, we can compute the pressure drop induced by the droplet. The
film thickness at low capillary numbers () agrees well with
Bretherton's scaling for bubbles as long as . For larger viscosity
ratios, the film thickness increases monotonically, before saturating for
to a value times larger than the film thickness of a
bubble. At larger capillary numbers, the film thickness follows the rational
function proposed by Aussillous \& Qu\'er\'e (2000) for bubbles, with a fitting
coefficient which is viscosity-ratio dependent. This coefficient modifies the
value to which the film thickness saturates at large capillary numbers. The
velocity of the droplet is found to be strongly dependent on the capillary
number and viscosity ratio. We also show that the normal viscous stresses at
the front and rear caps of the droplets cannot be neglected when calculating
the pressure drop for
The stability of a rising droplet: an inertialess nonmodal growth mechanism
Prior modal stability analysis (Kojima et al., Phys. Fluids, vol. 27, 1984)
predicted that a rising or sedimenting droplet in a viscous fluid is stable in
the presence of surface tension no matter how small, in contrast to
experimental and numerical results. By performing a non-modal stability
analysis, we demonstrate the potential for transient growth of the interfacial
energy of a rising droplet in the limit of inertialess Stokes equations. The
predicted critical capillary numbers for transient growth agree well with those
for unstable shape evolution of droplets found in the direct numerical
simulations of Koh & Leal (Phys. Fluids, vol. 1, 1989). Boundary integral
simulations are used to delineate the critical amplitude of the most
destabilizing perturbations. The critical amplitude is negatively correlated
with the linear optimal energy growth, implying that the transient growth is
responsible for reducing the necessary perturbation amplitude required to
escape the basin of attraction of the spherical solution.Comment: 11pages, 7 figure
Training microrobots to swim by a large language model
Machine learning and artificial intelligence have recently represented a
popular paradigm for designing and optimizing robotic systems across various
scales. Recent studies have showcased the innovative application of large
language models (LLMs) in industrial control [1] and in directing legged
walking robots [2]. In this study, we utilize an LLM, GPT-4, to train two
prototypical microrobots for swimming in viscous fluids. Adopting a few-shot
learning approach, we develop a minimal, unified prompt composed of only five
sentences. The same concise prompt successfully guides two distinct articulated
microrobots -- the three-link swimmer and the three-sphere swimmer -- in
mastering their signature strokes. These strokes, initially conceptualized by
physicists, are now effectively interpreted and applied by the LLM, enabling
the microrobots to circumvent the physical constraints inherent to
micro-locomotion. Remarkably, our LLM-based decision-making strategy
substantially surpasses a traditional reinforcement learning method in terms of
training speed. We discuss the nuanced aspects of prompt design, particularly
emphasizing the reduction of monetary expenses of using GPT-4
Rotation of a low-Reynolds-number watermill: theory and simulations
Recent experiments have demonstrated that small-scale rotary devices
installed in a microfluidic channel can be driven passively by the underlying
flow alone without resorting to conventionally applied magnetic or electric
fields. In this work, we conduct a theoretical and numerical study on such a
flow-driven "watermill" at low Reynolds number, focusing on its hydrodynamic
features. We model the watermill by a collection of equally-spaced rigid rods.
Based on the classical resistive force (RF) theory and direct numerical
simulations, we compute the watermill's instantaneous rotational velocity as a
function of its rod number , position and orientation. When , the
RF theory predicts that the watermill's rotational velocity is independent of
and its orientation, implying the full rotational symmetry (of infinity
order), even though the geometrical configuration exhibits a lower-fold
rotational symmetry; the numerical solutions including hydrodynamic
interactions show a weak dependence on and the orientation. In addition, we
adopt a dynamical system approach to identify the equilibrium positions of the
watermill and analyse their stability. We further compare the theoretically and
numerically derived rotational velocities, which agree with each other in
general, while considerable discrepancy arises in certain configurations owing
to the hydrodynamic interactions neglected by the RF theory. We confirm this
conclusion by employing the RF-based asymptotic framework incorporating
hydrodynamic interactions for a simpler watermill consisting of two or three
rods and we show that accounting for hydrodynamic interactions can
significantly enhance the accuracy of the theoretical predictions
The dynamics of a capsule in a wall-bounded oscillating shear flow
The motion of an initially spherical capsule in a wall-bounded oscillating
shear flow is investigated via an accelerated boundary integral implementation.
The neo-Hookean model is used as the constitutive law of the capsule membrane.
The maximum wall-normal migration is observed when the oscillation period of
the imposed shear is of the order of the relaxation time of the elastic
membrane; hence, the optimal capillary number scales with the inverse of the
oscillation frequency and the ratio agrees well with the theoretical prediction
in the limit of high-frequency oscillation. The migration velocity decreases
monotonically with the frequency of the applied shear and the capsule-wall
distance. We report a significant correlation between the capsule lateral
migration and the normal stress difference induced in the flow. The periodic
variation of the capsule deformation is roughly in phase with that of the
migration velocity and normal stress difference, with twice the frequency of
the imposed shear. The maximum deformation increases linearly with the membrane
elasticity before reaching a plateau at higher capillary numbers when the
deformation is limited by the time over which shear is applied in the same
direction and not by the membrane deformability. The maximum membrane
deformation scales as the distance to the wall to the power 1/3 as observed for
capsules and droplets in near-wall steady shear flows
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