论文标题
稀释性悬浮液中的水力学相互作用:从单个粒子特性到集体组织
Hydro-chemical interactions in dilute phoretic suspensions: from individual particle properties to collective organization
论文作者
论文摘要
Janus Phoretic胶体(JPS)自行词是自我生成的化学梯度和骨膜悬浮液中自发的非平凡动力学的结果,其长度比显微镜游泳者的大小要大得多。这种集体动力学是由(i)颗粒的自我刺激速度的竞争引起的,(ii)粒子和(iii)在周围介质中引入的流动干扰之间的吸引人/排斥化学介导的相互作用。这三种成分由胶体表面的形状和物理化学特性直接确定。由于这种链接,我们适应了最近且流行的动力学模型,用于稀释化学活性JP的悬浮液,其中颗粒的远场流体动力和化学特征是本质上连接的,并由设计性能明确确定。使用线性稳定性分析,我们表明自我推测可以诱导某些粒子的构型与实验观测一致的构型。进一步进行了完整动力学模型的数值模拟,以分析化学和流体动力学相互作用在非线性动力学中的相对重要性。我们的结果表明,颗粒密度中的常规图案是通过化学信号传导促进的,但由偏光颗粒共同产生的强液流动所阻止,无论其趋化性或抗血液ac式的性质如何(即用于拉普勒和推杆游泳者)。
Janus phoretic colloids (JPs) self-propel as a result of self-generated chemical gradients and exhibit spontaneous nontrivial dynamics within phoretic suspensions, on length scales much larger than the microscopic swimmer size. Such collective dynamics arise from the competition of (i) the self-propulsion velocity of the particles, (ii) the attractive/repulsive chemically-mediated interactions between particles and (iii) the flow disturbance they introduce in the surrounding medium. These three ingredients are directly determined by the shape and physico-chemical properties of the colloids' surface. Owing to such link, we adapt a recent and popular kinetic model for dilute suspensions of chemically-active JPs where the particles' far-field hydrodynamic and chemical signatures are intrinsically linked and explicitly determined by the design properties. Using linear stability analysis, we show that self-propulsion can induce a wave-selective mechanism for certain particles' configurations consistent with experimental observations. Numerical simulations of the complete kinetic model are further performed to analyze the relative importance of chemical and hydrodynamic interactions in the nonlinear dynamics. Our results show that regular patterns in the particle density are promoted by chemical signaling but prevented by the strong fluid flows generated collectively by the polarized particles, regardless of their chemotactic or antichemotactic nature (i.e. for both puller and pusher swimmers).