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Colloidal migration in temperature gradient is referred to as thermophoresis. In contrast to particles with spherical shape, we show that elongated colloids may have a thermophoretic response that varies with the colloid orientation. Remarkably, this can translate into a non-vanishing thermophoretic force in the direction perpendicular to the temperature gradient. Oppositely to the friction force, the thermophoretic force of a rod oriented with the temperature gradient can be larger or smaller than when oriented perpendicular to it. The precise anisotropic thermophoretic behavior clearly depends on the colloidal rod aspect ratio, and also on its surface details, which provides an interesting tunability to the devices constructed based on this principle. By means of mesoscale hydrodynamic simulations, we characterize this effect for different types of rod-like colloids.
Microswimmers (planktonic microorganisms or artificial active particles) immersed in a fluid interact with the ambient flow, altering their trajectories. By modelling anisotropic microswimmers as spheroidal bodies with an intrinsic swimming velocity
The orientational dynamics of inertialess anisotropic particles transported by two-dimensional convective turbulent flows display a coexistence of regular and chaotic features. We numerically demonstrate that very elongated particles (rods) align pre
Thermally induced particle flow in a charged colloidal suspension is studied in a fluid-mechanical approach. The force density acting on the charged boundary layer is derived in detail. From Stokes equation with no-slip boundary conditions at the par
We develop an analytic theory of strong anisotropy of the energy spectra in the thermally-driven turbulent counterflow of superfluid He-4. The key ingredients of the theory are the three-dimensional differential closure for the vector of the energy f
In presence of an externally supported, mean magnetic field a turbulent, conducting medium, such as plasma, becomes anisotropic. This mean magnetic field, which is separate from the fluctuating, turbulent part of the magnetic field, has considerable