Biopolymer dynamics driven by helical flagella

Physical Review Fluids American Physical Society 2:2 (2017) 113102

Authors:

Andrew K Balin, Andreas Zöttl, Julia Yeomans, TN Shendruk

Abstract:

Microbial flagellates typically inhabit complex suspensions of polymeric material which can impact the swimming speed of motile microbes, filter-feeding of sessile cells, and the generation of biofilms. There is currently a need to better understand how the fundamental dynamics of polymers near active cells or flagella impacts these various phenomena, in particular the hydrodynamic and steric influence of a rotating helical filament on suspended polymers. Our Stokesian dynamics simulations show that as a stationary rotating helix pumps fluid along its long axis, polymers migrate radially inwards while being elongated. We observe that the actuation of the helix tends to increase the probability of finding polymeric material within its pervaded volume. This accumulation of polymers within the vicinity of the helix is stronger for longer polymers. We further analyse the stochastic work performed by the helix on the polymers and show that this quantity is positive on average and increases with polymer contour length.

Entrainment and scattering in microswimmer-colloid interactions

Physical Review Fluids American Physical Society 2:11 (2017) 113101

Authors:

H Shum, Julia Yeomans

Abstract:

We use boundary element simulations to study the interaction of model microswimmers with a neutrally buoyant spherical particle. The ratio of the size of the particle to that of the swimmer is varied from R\supP / R\supS \ll 1, corresponding to swimmer--tracer scattering, to R\supP / R\supS \gg 1, approximately equivalent to the swimmer interacting with a fixed, flat surface. We find that details of the swimmer and particle trajectories vary for different swimmers. However, the overall characteristics of the scattering event fall into two regimes, depending on the relative magnitudes of the impact parameter, \rho, and the collision radius, R^coll=R\supP + R\supS. The range of particle motion, defined as the maximum distance between two points on the trajectory, has only a weak dependence on the impact parameter when \rho R^coll the range decreases as a power law in \rho and is insensitive to the size of the particle. We also demonstrate that large particles can cause swimmers to be deflected through large angles. In some instances, this swimmer deflection can lead to larger net displacements of the particle. Based on these results, we estimate the effective diffusivity of a particle in a dilute bath of swimmers and show that there is a non-monotonic dependence on particle radius. Similarly, we show that the effective diffusivity of a swimmer scattering in a suspension of particles varies non-monotonically with particle radius.

Focusing and sorting of ellipsoidal magnetic particles in microchannels

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society 119:19 (2017) 198002

Authors:

Daiki Matsunaga, Fanlong Meng, Andreas Zoettl, Ramin Golestanian, Julia Yeomans

Abstract:

We present a simple method to control the position of ellipsoidal magnetic particles in microchannel Poiseuille flow at low Reynolds number using a static uniform magnetic field. The magnetic field is utilized to pin the particle orientation, and the hydrodynamic interactions between ellipsoids and channel walls allow control of the transverse position of the particles. We employ a far-field hydrodynamic theory and simulations using the boundary element method and Brownian dynamics to show how magnetic particles can be focussed and segregated by size and shape. This is of importance for particle manipulation in lab-on-a-chip devices.

Atypical energy eigenstates in the Hubbard chain and quantum disentangled liquids

(2017)

Authors:

Thomas Veness, Fabian HL Essler, Matthew PA Fisher

How SU(2)$_4$ Anyons are Z$_3$ Parafermions

(2017)

Authors:

Richard Fern, Johannes Kombe, Steven H Simon