Hydrodynamics of self-propulsion near a boundary: predictions and accuracy of far-field approximations
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2907118
DOI10.1017/jfm.2012.101zbMath1248.76170arXiv1211.6996OpenAlexW2132820483MaRDI QIDQ2907118
Eric Lauga, Saverio E. Spagnolie
Publication date: 7 September 2012
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1211.6996
Related Items
A simulation study of sperm motility hydrodynamics near fish eggs and spheres ⋮ Swimming and pumping by helical waves in viscous and viscoelastic fluids ⋮ Diffusiophoretic propulsion of an isotropic active colloidal particle near a finite-sized disk embedded in a planar fluid–fluid interface ⋮ Collective dynamics and rheology of confined phoretic suspensions ⋮ Hydrodynamic capture and release of passively driven particles by active particles under Hele-Shaw flows ⋮ Optimizing low-Reynolds-number predation via optimal control and reinforcement learning ⋮ Surfactant-induced stagnant zones in the Jeong-Moffatt free surface Stokes flow problem ⋮ A numerical method for suspensions of articulated bodies in viscous flows ⋮ Locomotion inside a surfactant-laden drop at low surface Péclet numbers ⋮ A generalized traction integral equation for Stokes flow, with applications to near-wall particle mobility and viscous erosion ⋮ Slow motion of a sphere near a sinusoidal surface ⋮ Motion of a model swimmer near a weakly deforming interface ⋮ Shape matters: entrapment of a model ciliate at interfaces ⋮ Near-wall hydrodynamic slip triggers swimming state transition of micro-organisms ⋮ Hydrodynamics of micro-swimmers in films ⋮ Collision between chemically driven self-propelled drops ⋮ Slippery rheotaxis: new regimes for guiding wall-bound microswimmers ⋮ Hydrodynamic instabilities in a two-dimensional sheet of microswimmers embedded in a three-dimensional fluid ⋮ Arbitrary axisymmetric steady streaming: flow, force and propulsion ⋮ Exact solutions for hydrodynamic interactions of two squirming spheres ⋮ Dynamics of a treadmilling microswimmer near a no-slip wall in simple shear ⋮ Active colloids in the context of chemical kinetics ⋮ Boundary behaviours of \textit{Leishmania mexicana}: a hydrodynamic simulation study ⋮ Swimming of microorganisms in quasi-two-dimensional membranes ⋮ Exuding porous media: deviations from Darcy's law ⋮ Wall-induced translation of a rotating particle in a shear-thinning fluid ⋮ Transient dispersion process of active particles ⋮ Microorganism billiards ⋮ Exact solutions for cylindrical ‘slip–stick’ Janus swimmers in Stokes flow ⋮ Numerical simulation of bundling of helical elastic rods in a viscous fluid ⋮ Generalized squirming motion of a sphere ⋮ A spherical squirming swimmer in unsteady Stokes flow ⋮ Low-Reynolds-number swimming in a capillary tube ⋮ Universal image systems for non-periodic and periodic Stokes flows above a no-slip wall ⋮ Regularized Stokeslet segments ⋮ Transport of a dilute active suspension in pressure-driven channel flow ⋮ Fokker-Plank system for movement of micro-organism population in confined environment ⋮ The hydrodynamics of an active squirming particle inside of a porous container ⋮ A study of spermatozoan swimming stability near a surface ⋮ Spontaneous flows in suspensions of active cyclic swimmers ⋮ Bifurcation and stability of downflowing gyrotactic micro-organism suspensions in a vertical pipe ⋮ Active cloaking in Stokes flows via reinforcement learning ⋮ Helicoidal particles and swimmers in a flow at low Reynolds number ⋮ Shape matters: a Brownian microswimmer in a channel ⋮ Boundary element methods for particles and microswimmers in a linear viscoelastic fluid ⋮ Dispersion of active particles in confined unidirectional flows ⋮ Bacterial spinning top ⋮ Analytical study for swimmers in a channel ⋮ A note on forces exerted by a Stokeslet on confining boundaries ⋮ Driven and active colloids at fluid interfaces ⋮ Instability of an autochemotactic active suspension ⋮ Instability of a thin film of chemotactic active suspension ⋮ Active suspensions in thin films: nutrient uptake and swimmer motion ⋮ Thermotactic navigation of an artificial microswimmer near a plane wall
Cites Work
- Modeling slender bodies with the method of regularized Stokeslets
- Fundamental singularities of viscous flow. I: The image systems in the vicinity of a stationary no-slip boundary
- Modeling simple locomotors in Stokes flow
- The method of images for regularized Stokeslets
- Helical distributions of stokeslets
- Sperm motility in the presence of boundaries
- Hydrodynamic interactions in squirmer motion: swimming with a neighbour and close to a wall
- The Method of Regularized Stokeslets
- Bacterial swimming and oxygen transport near contact lines
- Stirring by squirmers
- Human sperm accumulation near surfaces: a simulation study
- Hydrodynamic interaction of two swimming model micro-organisms
- On the hydrodynamics of ‘slip–stick’ spheres
- Modelling bacterial behaviour close to a no-slip plane boundary: the influence of bacterial geometry
- Dispersion of biased swimming micro-organisms in a fluid flowing through a tube
- Mathematical Description of Microbial Biofilms
- Second Kind Integral Equation Formulation of Stokes’ Flows Past a Particle of Arbitrary Shape
- Mechanics of Swimming and Flying
- Boundary Integral and Singularity Methods for Linearized Viscous Flow
- Hydromechanics of low-Reynolds-number flow. Part 2. Singularity method for Stokes flows
- A porous prolate-spheroidal model for ciliated micro-organisms
- Small inertial effects on a spherical bubble, drop or particle moving near a wall in a time-dependent linear flow
- Pair velocity correlations among swimming Escherichia coli bacteria are determined by force-quadrupole hydrodynamic interactions
- A spherical envelope approach to ciliary propulsion
- Analysis of the swimming of microscopic organisms
- On the squirming motion of nearly spherical deformable bodies through liquids at very small reynolds numbers
This page was built for publication: Hydrodynamics of self-propulsion near a boundary: predictions and accuracy of far-field approximations