557 research outputs found

    Fluid Vesicles with Viscous Membranes in Shear Flow

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    The effect of membrane viscosity on the dynamics of vesicles in shear flow is studied. We present a new simulation technique, which combines three-dimensional multi-particle collision dynamics for the solvent with a dynamically-triangulated membrane model. Vesicles are found to transit from steady tank-treading to unsteady tumbling motion with increasing membrane viscosity. Depending on the reduced volume and membrane viscosity, shear can induce both discocyte-to-prolate and prolate-to-discocyte transformations. This dynamical behavior can be understood from a simplified model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Fluctuation Pressure of Biomembranes in Planar Confinement

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    The fluctuation pressure of a lipid-bilayer membrane is important for the stability of lamellar phases and the adhesion of membranes to surfaces. In contrast to many theoretical studies, which predict a decrease of the pressure with the cubed inverse distance between the membranes, Freund suggested very recently a linear inverse distance dependence [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 110, 2047 (2013)]. We address this discrepancy by performing Monte Carlo simulations for a membrane model discretized on a square lattice and employ the wall theorem to evaluate the pressure for a single membrane between parallel walls. For distances that are small compared with the lattice constant, the pressure indeed depends on the inverse distance as predicted by Freund. For intermediate distances, the pressure depends on the cubed inverse distance as predicted by Helfrich [Z. Naturforsch. A 33, 305 (1978)]. Here, the crossover length between the two regimes is a molecular length scale. Finally, for distances large compared with the mean squared fluctuations of the membrane, the entire membrane acts as a soft particle and the pressure on the walls again depends linearly on the inverse distance.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Run-and-Tumble Dynamics of Self-Propelled Particles in Confinement

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    Run-and-tumble dynamics is a wide-spread mechanism of swimming bacteria. The accumulation of run-and-tumble microswimmers near impermeable surfaces is studied theoretically and numerically in the low-density limit in two and three spatial dimensions. Both uni-modal and exponential distributions of the run lengths are considered. Constant run lengths lead to {peaks and depletions regions} in the density distribution of particles near the surface, in contrast to {exponentially-distributed run lengths}. Finally, we present a universal accumulation law for large channel widths, which applies not only to run-and-tumble swimmers, but also to many other kinds of self-propelled particles

    Flow Generation by Rotating Colloids in Planar Microchannels

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    Non-equilibrium structure formation and conversion of spinning to translational motion of magnetic colloids driven by an external rotating magnetic field in microchannels is studied by particle-based mesoscale hydrodynamics simulations. For straight channels, laning is found. In ring channels, the channel curvature breaks symmetry and leads to a net fluid transport around the annulus with the same rotational direction as the colloidal spinning direction. The dependence of the translational velocity on channel width, ring radius, colloid concentration, and thermal motion is predicted.Comment: http://epljournal.edpsciences.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=standard&Itemid=129&url=/articles/epl/abs/2010/24/epl13212/epl13212.htm

    Self-Organized Vortices of Circling Self-Propelled Particles and Curved Active Flagella

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    Self-propelled point-like particles move along circular trajectories when their translocation velocity is constant and the angular velocity related to their orientation vector is also constant. We investigate the collective behavior of ensembles of such circle swimmers by Brownian dynamics simulations. If the particles interact via a "velocity-trajectory coordination" rule within neighboring particles, a self-organized vortex pattern emerges. This vortex pattern is characterized by its particle-density correlation function GρG_\rho, the density correlation function GcG_c of trajectory centers, and an order parameter SS representing the degree of the aggregation of the particles. Here, we systematically vary the system parameters, such as the particle density and the interaction range, in order to reveal the transition of the system from a light-vortex-dominated to heavy-vortex-dominated state, where vortices contain mainly a single and many self-propelled particles, respectively. We also study a semi-dilute solution of curved, sinusoidal-beating flagella, as an example of circling self-propelled particles with explicit propulsion mechanism and excluded-volume interactions. Our simulation results are compared with previous experimental results for the vortices in sea-urchin sperm solutions near a wall. The properties of the vortices in simulations and experiments are found to agree quantitatively.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure

    Giant adsorption of microswimmers: duality of shape asymmetry and wall curvature

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    The effect of shape asymmetry of microswimmers on their adsorption capacity at confining channel walls is studied by a simple dumbbell model. For a shape polarity of a forward-swimming cone, like the stroke-averaged shape of a sperm, extremely long wall retention times are found, caused by a non-vanishing component of the propulsion force pointing steadily into the wall, which grows exponentially with the self-propulsion velocity and the shape asymmetry. A direct duality relation between shape asymmetry and wall curvature is proposed and verified. Our results are relevant for the design microswimmer with controlled wall-adhesion properties. In addition, we confirm that pressure in active systems is strongly sensitive to the details of the particle-wall interactions.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure

    Wrapping of ellipsoidal nano-particles by fluid membranes

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    Membrane budding and wrapping of particles, such as viruses and nano-particles, play a key role in intracellular transport and have been studied for a variety of biological and soft matter systems. We study nano-particle wrapping by numerical minimization of bending, surface tension, and adhesion energies. We calculate deformation and adhesion energies as a function of membrane elastic parameters and adhesion strength to obtain wrapping diagrams. We predict unwrapped, partially-wrapped, and completely-wrapped states for prolate and oblate ellipsoids for various aspect ratios and particle sizes. In contrast to spherical particles, where partially-wrapped states exist only for finite surface tensions, partially-wrapped states for ellipsoids occur already for tensionless membranes. In addition, the partially-wrapped states are long-lived, because of an increased energy cost for wrapping of the highly-curved tips. Our results suggest a lower uptake rate of ellipsoidal particles by cells and thereby a higher virulence of tubular viruses compared with icosahedral viruses, as well as co-operative budding of ellipsoidal particles on membranes.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure

    Migration of semiflexible polymers in microcapillary flow

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    The non-equilibrium structural and dynamical properties of a semiflexible polymer confined in a cylindrical microchannel and exposed to a Poiseuille flow is studied by mesoscale hydrodynamic simulations. For a polymer with a length half of its persistence length, large variations in orientation and conformations are found as a function of radial distance and flow strength. In particular, the polymer exhibits U-shaped conformations near the channel center. Hydrodynamic interactions lead to strong cross-streamline migration. Outward migration is governed by the polymer orientation and the corresponding anisotropy in its diffusivity. Strong tumbling motion is observed, with a tumbling time which exhibits the same dependence on Peclet number as a polymer in shear flow.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, accepted by EP
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