4.7 Article

Exact solutions for hydrodynamic interactions of two squirming spheres

Journal

JOURNAL OF FLUID MECHANICS
Volume 813, Issue -, Pages 618-646

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jfm.2016.837

Keywords

biological fluid dynamics; low-Reynolds-number flows; micro-organism dynamics

Funding

  1. UK EPSRC [A.MACX.0002]

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We provide exact solutions of the Stokes equations for a squirming sphere close to a no-slip surface, both planar and spherical, and for the interactions between two squirmers, in three dimensions. These allow the hydrodynamic interactions of swimming microscopic organisms with confining boundaries, or with each other, to he determined for arbitrary separation and, in particular, in the close proximity regime where approximate methods based on point-singularity descriptions cease to he valid. We give a detailed description of the circular motion of an arbitrary squirmer moving parallel to a no slip spherical boundary or flat free surface at close separation, finding that the circling generically has opposite sense at free surfaces and at solid boundaries. While the asymptotic interaction is symmetric under head tail reversal of the swimmer, in the near field, microscopic structure can result in significant asymmetry. We also find the translational velocity towards the surface for a simple model with only the lowest two squirming modes. By comparing these to asymptotic approximations of the interaction we find that the transition from near- to far-field behaviour occurs at a separation of approximately two swimmer diameters. These solutions are for the rotational velocity about the wall normal, or common diameter of two spheres, and the translational speed along that same direction, and are obtained using the Lorentz reciprocal theorem for Stokes flows in conjunction with known solutions for the conjugate Stokes drag problems, the derivations of which are demonstrated here for completeness. The analogous motions in the perpendicular directions, i.e. parallel to the wall, currently cannot he calculated exactly since the relevant Stokes drag solutions needed for the reciprocal theorem arc not available.

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