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Many micro-organisms find themselves immersed in fluids displaying non-Newtonian rheological properties such as viscoelasticity and shear-thinning viscosity. The effects of viscoelasticity on swimming at low Reynolds numbers have already received considerable attention, but much less is known about swimming in shear-thinning fluids. A general understanding of the fundamental question of how shear-thinning rheology influences swimming still remains elusive. To probe this question further, we study a spherical squirmer in a shear-thinning fluid using a combination of asymptotic analysis and numerical simulations. Shear-thinning rheology is found to affect a squirming swimmer in non-trivial and surprising ways; we predict and show instances of both faster and slower swimming depending on the surface actuation of the squirmer. We also illustrate that while a drag and thrust decomposition can provide insights into swimming in Newtonian fluids, extending this intuition to problems in complex media can prove problematic.
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Charu Datt
Keio University
Lailai Zhu
National University of Singapore
Gwynn J. Elfring
University of British Columbia
Journal of Fluid Mechanics
University of British Columbia
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Santa Clara University
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Datt et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ffb798581c6e761e778750 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/jfm.2015.600