Many biological fluids have polymeric microstructures and display
non-Newtonian rheology. We take advantage of such nonlinear fluid behavior and
combine it with geometrical symmetry-breaking to design a novel small-scale
propeller able to move only in complex fluids. Its propulsion characteristics
are explored numerically in an Oldroyd-B fluid for finite Deborah numbers while
the small Deborah number limit is investigated analytically using a
second-order fluid model. We then derive expressions relating the propulsion
speed to the rheological properties of the complex fluid, allowing thus to
infer the normal stress coefficients in the fluid from the locomotion of the
propeller. Our simple mechanism can therefore be used either as a non-Newtonian
micro-propeller or as a micro-rheometer