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Self-diffusiophoretic propulsion of a spheroidal particle in a shear-thinning fluid

Guangpu Zhu, Brandon van Gogh, Lailai Zhu, On Shun Pak, Yi Man

2024Journal of Fluid Mechanics12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Shear-thinning viscosity is a non-Newtonian behaviour that active particles often encounter in biological fluids such as blood and mucus. The fundamental question of how this ubiquitous non-Newtonian rheology affects the propulsion of active particles has attracted substantial interest. In particular, spherical Janus particles driven by self-diffusiophoresis, a major physico-chemical propulsion mechanism of synthetic active particles, were shown to always swim slower in a shear-thinning fluid than in a Newtonian fluid. In this work, we move beyond the spherical limit to examine the effect of particle eccentricity on self-diffusiophoretic propulsion in a shear-thinning fluid. We use a combination of asymptotic analysis and numerical simulations to show that shear-thinning rheology can enhance self-diffusiophoretic propulsion of a spheroidal particle, in stark contrast to previous findings for the spherical case. A systematic characterization of the dependence of the propulsion speed on the particle's active surface coverage has also uncovered an intriguing feature associated with the propulsion speeds of a pair of complementarily coated particles not previously reported. Symmetry arguments are presented to elucidate how this new feature emerges as a combined effect of anisotropy of the spheroidal geometry and nonlinearity in fluid rheology.

Topics & Concepts

Shear thinningNewtonian fluidPropulsionMechanicsClassical mechanicsParticle (ecology)RheologyPhysicsComplex fluidShear (geology)ViscosityEccentricity (behavior)Materials scienceComposite materialGeologyThermodynamicsOceanographyLawPolitical scienceMicro and Nano RoboticsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing TechnologiesElectrostatics and Colloid Interactions