scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Exact solution for the slow motion of a spherical particle in the presence of an interface with slip regime

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, an analytical and numerical study for the creeping flow caused by a solid spherical particle with a slip-flow surface is considered in the presence of a fluid-fluid plane interface.
Abstract
An analytical and numerical study for the creeping flow caused by a solid spherical particle with a slip-flow surface is considered in the presence of a fluid–fluid plane interface. The particle rotating about or translating along an axis perpendicular to the interface. The motion is investigated in the limit of low capillary number where in this situation the interface is of negligible deformation. Using a bipolar coordinate system, the stream functions are constructed for both fluid phases as Reynolds number tends to zero. The novelty of this work is allowing the slip on the surface of the particle. The matching boundary conditions at the plane interface and the slip boundary condition on the particle’s surface are applied to the truncated solutions to specify the unknown coefficients. A comparison is made between the results of the analytical solution and the results obtained from a boundary collocation method. The torque and drag force exerted on the particle are calculated using both techniques, which are found in perfect agreement. In addition to compression with collocation techniques, we also studied the predicted changes in the drag force and torque due to the presence of the plane interface and the slippage at the surface of the particle. Our results of the drag force and torque are compared with the available data in the literature for the special cases. The work is motivated by its possible application as an analytical tool in the study of locomotion of microswimmers near an interface such as synthetic swimmers and microorganisms.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Axisymmetric motion of a slip spherical particle in the presence of a Brinkman interface with stress jump

TL;DR: In this article, the axisymmetric motion of a spherical particle in the presence of a porous interface is considered in the limit of small Reynolds and capillary numbers where the interface is of negligible deformation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Axisymmetric slow motion of a non-deformable spherical droplet or slip particle towards an orifice in a plane wall

TL;DR: In this paper , the axisymmetric motion of a viscous fluid sphere or solid spherical particle with a slip-flow surface that moves perpendicular towards an orifice in a plane wall was studied in the quasi-steady limit under low Reynolds number.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrodynamic force on a spherical particle oscillating in a micropolar fluid near a plan wall

TL;DR: In this article , a semi-analytical model was developed to analyse the rectilinear oscillations of a spherical particle immersed in an incompressible micropolar fluid bounded by a rigid plane wall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermophoresis of a spherical particle in a permeable microchannel with thermal stress slip

TL;DR: In this paper , a study of the thermophoretic motion of a spherical aerosol particle in a microchannel with permeable walls bounding a porous medium is presented, where the field equations of energy and momentum for the system are solved using a semi-analytical method with the help of a boundary collocation technique.
Journal Article

Near wall dynamics of a large particle in a highly bidisperse colloidal solution

TL;DR: A new lubrication theory is developed which takes into account the presence of the smaller particles in the space between the larger particle and the wall and tends to the asymptotic value corresponding to the large particle moving in a clear suspending fluid.
References
More filters
Book

An Introduction to Fluid Dynamics

TL;DR: The dynamique des : fluides Reference Record created on 2005-11-18 is updated on 2016-08-08 and shows improvements in the quality of the data over the past decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrodynamics of soft active matter

TL;DR: This review summarizes theoretical progress in the field of active matter, placing it in the context of recent experiments, and highlights the experimental relevance of various semimicroscopic derivations of the continuum theory for describing bacterial swarms and suspensions, the cytoskeleton of living cells, and vibrated granular material.
Journal ArticleDOI

The hydrodynamics of swimming microorganisms

TL;DR: The biophysical and mechanical principles of locomotion at the small scales relevant to cell swimming, tens of micrometers and below are reviewed, with emphasis on the simple physical picture and fundamental flow physics phenomena in this regime.
Book

Low Reynolds number hydrodynamics : with special applications to particulate media

TL;DR: The Navier-Stokes equations can be employed for useful practical applications beyond the elementary problems of laminar flow in pipes and Stokes law for the motion of a single particle as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Slow viscous motion of a sphere parallel to a plane wall—I Motion through a quiescent fluid

TL;DR: Asymptotic solutions of the Stokes equations are derived for both the translational and rotational motions of a sphere parallel to a plane wall bounding a semi-infinite, quiescent, viscous fluid in the limit where the gap width tends to zero as discussed by the authors.
Related Papers (5)