← Back

Suspensions

Topic spotlight
TopicWorld Wide

suspensions

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with suspensions across World Wide.
5 curated items5 Seminars
Updated almost 5 years ago
5 items · suspensions
5 results
SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Mixed active-passive suspensions: from particle entrainment to spontaneous demixing

Marco Polin
University Warwick
Feb 16, 2021

Understanding the properties of active matter is a challenge which is currently driving a rapid growth in soft- and bio-physics. Some of the most important examples of active matter are at the microscale, and include active colloids and suspensions of microorganisms, both as a simple active fluid (single species) and as mixed suspensions of active and passive elements. In this last class of systems, recent experimental and theoretical work has started to provide a window into new phenomena including activity-induced depletion interactions, phase separation, and the possibility to extract net work from active suspensions. Here I will present our work on a paradigmatic example of mixed active-passive system, where the activity is provided by swimming microalgae. Macro- and micro-scopic experiments reveal that microorganism-colloid interactions are dominated by rare close encounters leading to large displacements through direct entrainment. Simulations and theoretical modelling show that the ensuing particle dynamics can be understood in terms of a simple jump-diffusion process, combining standard diffusion with Poisson-distributed jumps. Entrainment length can be understood within the framework of Taylor dispersion as a competition between advection by the no-slip surface of the cell body and microparticle diffusion. Building on these results, we then ask how external control of the dynamics of the active component (e.g. induced microswimmer anisotropy/inhomogeneity) can be used to alter the transport of passive cargo. As a first step in this direction, we study the behaviour of mixed active-passive systems in confinement. The resulting spatial inhomogeneity in swimmers’ distribution and orientation has a dramatic effect on the spatial distribution of passive particles, with the colloids accumulating either towards the boundaries or towards the bulk of the sample depending on the size of the container. We show that this can be used to induce the system to de-mix spontaneously.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Soft Capricious Matter: The collective behavior of particles with “noisy” interactions

Bulbul Chakraborty
Brandeis University
Oct 20, 2020

Diversity in the natural world emerges from the collective behavior of large numbers of interacting objects. Statistical physics provides the framework relating microscopic to macroscopic properties. A fundamental assumption underlying this approach is that we have complete knowledge of the interactions between the microscopic entities. But what if that, even though possible in principle becomes impossible in practice ? Can we still construct a framework for describing their collective behavior ? Dense suspensions and granular materials are two often quoted examples where we face this challenge. These are systems where because of the complicated surface properties of particles there is extreme sensitivity of the interactions to particle positions. In this talk, I will present a perspective based on notions of constraint satisfaction that provides a way forward. I will focus on our recent work on the emergence of elasticity in the absence of any broken symmetry, and sketch out other problems that can be addressed using this perspective.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Continuum modelling of active fluids beyond the generalised Taylor dispersion

Yongyun Hwang
Imperial College London
Sep 15, 2020

The Smoluchowski equation has often been used as the starting point of many continuum models of active suspensions. However, its six-dimensional nature depending on time, space and orientation requires a huge computational cost, fundamentally limiting its use for large-scale problems, such as mixing and transport of active fluids in turbulent flows. Despite the singular nature in strain-dominant flows, the generalised Taylor dispersion (GTD) theory (Frankel & Brenner 1991, J. Fluid Mech. 230:147-181) has been understood to be one of the most promising ways to reduce the Smoluchowski equation into an advection-diffusion equation, the mean drift and diffusion tensor of which rely on ‘local’ flow information only. In this talk, we will introduce an exact transformation of the Smoluchowski equation into such an advection-diffusion equation requiring only local flow information. Based on this transformation, a new advection-diffusion equation will subsequently be proposed by taking an asymptotic analysis in the limit of small particle velocity. With several examples, it will be demonstrated that the new advection-diffusion model, non-singular in strain-dominant flows, outperforms the GTD theory.