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It has been known for some time that some microorganisms can swim faster in high-viscosity gel-forming polymer solutions. These gel-like media come to mimic highly viscous heterogeneous environment that these microorganisms encounter in-vivo. The qualitative explanation of this phenomena first offered by Berg and Turner [Nature (London) 278, 349 (1979)], suggests that propulsion enhancement is a result of flagellum pushing on quasi-rigid loose polymer network formed in some polymer solutions. Inspired by these observations, inertia-less propulsion in a heterogeneous viscous medium composed of sparse array of stationary obstacles embedded into incompressible Newtonian liquid is considered. It is demonstrated that for prescribed propulsion gaits, including propagating surface distortions and rotating helical filament, the propulsion speed is enhanced when compared to swimming in purely viscous solvent. It is also shown that the locomotion in heterogenous viscous media is characterized by improved hydrodynamic efficiency. The results of the rigorous numerical simulation of the rotating helical filament propelled through a random sparse array of stationary obstructions are in close agreement with predictions of the proposed resistive force theory based on effective media approximation.
In this fluid dynamics video, we present various aspects of copepod behavior at low Re.
Marangoni propulsion is a form of locomotion wherein an asymmetric release of surfactant by a body located at the surface of a liquid leads to its directed motion. We present in this paper a mathematical model for Marangoni propulsion in the viscous
Recent experiments have demonstrated that small-scale rotary devices installed in a microfluidic channel can be driven passively by the underlying flow alone without resorting to conventionally applied magnetic or electric fields. In this work, we co
We design and simulate the motion of a new swimmer, the {it Quadroar}, with three dimensional translation and reorientation capabilities in low Reynolds number conditions. The Quadroar is composed of an $texttt{I}$-shaped frame whose body link is a s
Bio-inspired oscillatory foil propulsion has the ability to traverse various propulsive modes by dynamically changing the foils heave and pitch kinematics. This research characterizes the propulsion properties and wake dynamics of a symmetric oscilla