Simulating squirmers with smoothed particle dynamics
Microswimmers play an important role in shaping the world around us. The squirmer is a simple model for microswimmer whose cilia oscillations on its spherical surface induce an effective slip velocity to propel itself. The rapid development of computational fluid dynamics methods has markedly enhanc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Microswimmers play an important role in shaping the world around us. The
squirmer is a simple model for microswimmer whose cilia oscillations on its
spherical surface induce an effective slip velocity to propel itself. The rapid
development of computational fluid dynamics methods has markedly enhanced our
capacity to study the behavior of squirmers in aqueous environments.
Nevertheless, a unified methodology that can fully address the complexity of
fluid-solid coupling at multiple scales and interface tracking for multiphase
flows remains elusive, posing an outstanding challenge to the field. To this
end, we investigate the potential of the smoothed particle dynamics (SPD)
method as an alternative approach for simulating squirmers. The Lagrangian
nature of the method allows it to effectively address the aforementioned
difficulty. By introducing a novel treatment of the boundary condition and
assigning appropriate slip velocities to the boundary particles, the
SPD-squirmer model is able to accurately represent a range of microswimmer
types including pushers, neutral swimmers, and pullers. We systematically
validate the steady-state velocity of the squirmer, the resulting flow field,
its hydrodynamic interactions with the surrounding environment, and the mutual
collision of two squirmers. In the presence of Brownian motion, the model is
also able to correctly calculate the velocity and angular velocity
autocorrelation functions at the mesoscale. Finally, we simulate a squirmer
within a multiphase flow by considering a droplet that encloses a squirmer and
imposing a surface tension between the two flow phases. We find that the
squirmer within the droplet exhibits different motion types. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.13893 |