4.7 Article

Confined self-propulsion of an isotropic active colloid

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 933, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2021.1081

Keywords

active matter; drops

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [714027]

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This study investigates the self-propulsion of isotropic colloids inside capillary tubes through numerical simulations. The results demonstrate that spatial confinement promotes the colloids' spontaneous motion and significantly affects the self-propulsion velocities.
To spontaneously break their intrinsic symmetry and self-propel at the micron scale, isotropic active colloidal particles and droplets exploit the nonlinear convective transport of chemical solutes emitted/consumed at their surface by the surface-driven fluid flows generated by these solutes. Significant progress was recently made to understand the onset of self-propulsion and nonlinear dynamics. Yet, most models ignore a fundamental experimental feature, namely the spatial confinement of the colloid, and its effect on propulsion. In this work the self-propulsion of an isotropic colloid inside a capillary tube is investigated numerically. A flexible computational framework is proposed based on a finite-volume approach on adaptative octree grids and embedded boundary methods. This method is able to account for complex geometric confinement, the nonlinear coupling of chemical transport and flow fields, and the precise resolution of the surface boundary conditions, that drive the system's dynamics. Somewhat counterintuitively, spatial confinement promotes the colloid's spontaneous motion by reducing the minimum advection-to-diffusion ratio or Peclet number, Pe, required to self-propel; furthermore, self-propulsion velocities are significantly modified as the colloid-to-capillary size ratio kappa is increased, reaching a maximum at fixed Pe for an optimal confinement 0 < kappa < 1. These properties stem from a fundamental change in the dominant chemical transport mechanism with respect to the unbounded problem: with diffusion now restricted in most directions by the confining walls, the excess solute is predominantly convected away downstream from the colloid, enhancing front-back concentration contrasts. These results are confirmed quantitatively using conservation arguments and lubrication analysis of the tightly confined limit, kappa -> 1.

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