TY - JOUR
T1 - From hydrodynamic lubrication to many-body interactions in dense suspensions of active swimmers
AU - Yoshinaga, Natsuhiko
AU - Liverpool, Tanniemola B.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to S. Fielding, T. Ishikawa and R. Golestanian for helpful discussions. NY acknowledges the support by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Nos. JP16H00793 and 17K05605. TBL is supported by BrisSynBio, a BB-SRC/EPSRC Advanced Synthetic Biology Research Center (grant number BB/L01386X/1). We would like to thank the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Cambridge, for support and hospitality during the programmes, “The Mathematics of Liquid Crystals” and “Dynamics of active suspensions, gels, cells and tissues” where work on this article was started.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, EDP Sciences, SIF, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2018/6/1
Y1 - 2018/6/1
N2 - Abstract.: We study how hydrodynamic interactions affect the collective behaviour of active particles suspended in a fluid at high concentrations, with particular attention to lubrication forces which appear when the particles are very close to one another. We compute exactly the limiting behaviour of the hydrodynamic interactions between two spherical (circular) active swimmers in very close proximity to one another in the general setting in both three and (two) dimensions. Combining this with far-field interactions, we develop a novel numerical scheme which allows us to study the collective behaviour of large numbers of active particles with accurate hydrodynamic interactions when close to one another. We study active swimmers whose intrinsic flow fields are characterised by force dipoles and quadrupoles. Using this scheme, we are able to show that lubrication forces when the particles are very close to each other can play as important a role as long-range hydrodynamic interactions in determining their many-body behaviour. We find that when the swimmer force dipole is large, finite clusters and open gel-like clusters appear rather than complete phase separation. This suppression is due to near-field lubrication interactions. For swimmers with small force dipoles, we find surprisingly that a globally polar-ordered phase appears because near-field lubrication rather than long-range hydrodynamics dominates the alignment mechanism. Polar order is present for very large system sizes and is stable to fluctuations with a finite noise amplitude. We explain the emergence of polar order using a minimal model in which only the leading rotational effect of the near-field interaction is included. These phenomena are also reproduced in two dimensions.
AB - Abstract.: We study how hydrodynamic interactions affect the collective behaviour of active particles suspended in a fluid at high concentrations, with particular attention to lubrication forces which appear when the particles are very close to one another. We compute exactly the limiting behaviour of the hydrodynamic interactions between two spherical (circular) active swimmers in very close proximity to one another in the general setting in both three and (two) dimensions. Combining this with far-field interactions, we develop a novel numerical scheme which allows us to study the collective behaviour of large numbers of active particles with accurate hydrodynamic interactions when close to one another. We study active swimmers whose intrinsic flow fields are characterised by force dipoles and quadrupoles. Using this scheme, we are able to show that lubrication forces when the particles are very close to each other can play as important a role as long-range hydrodynamic interactions in determining their many-body behaviour. We find that when the swimmer force dipole is large, finite clusters and open gel-like clusters appear rather than complete phase separation. This suppression is due to near-field lubrication interactions. For swimmers with small force dipoles, we find surprisingly that a globally polar-ordered phase appears because near-field lubrication rather than long-range hydrodynamics dominates the alignment mechanism. Polar order is present for very large system sizes and is stable to fluctuations with a finite noise amplitude. We explain the emergence of polar order using a minimal model in which only the leading rotational effect of the near-field interaction is included. These phenomena are also reproduced in two dimensions.
KW - Topical issue: Advances in Computational Methods for Soft Matter Systems
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U2 - 10.1140/epje/i2018-11683-x
DO - 10.1140/epje/i2018-11683-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 29926216
AN - SCOPUS:85048896567
SN - 1292-8941
VL - 41
JO - European Physical Journal E
JF - European Physical Journal E
IS - 6
M1 - 76
ER -