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Published September 2017 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Inertial effects on the stress generation of active fluids

Abstract

Suspensions of self-propelled bodies generate a unique mechanical stress owing to their motility that impacts their large-scale collective behavior. For microswimmers suspended in a fluid with negligible particle inertia, we have shown that the virial swim stress is a useful quantity to understand the rheology and nonequilibrium behaviors of active soft matter systems. For larger self-propelled organisms such as fish, it is unclear how particle inertia impacts their stress generation and collective movement. Here we analyze the effects of finite particle inertia on the mechanical pressure (or stress) generated by a suspension of self-propelled bodies. We find that swimmers of all scales generate a unique swim stress and Reynolds stress that impact their collective motion. We discover that particle inertia plays a similar role as confinement in overdamped active Brownian systems, where the reduced run length of the swimmers decreases the swim stress and affects the phase behavior. Although the swim and Reynolds stresses vary individually with the magnitude of particle inertia, the sum of the two contributions is independent of particle inertia. This points to an important concept when computing stresses in computer simulations of nonequilibrium systems: The Reynolds and the virial stresses must both be calculated to obtain the overall stress generated by a system.

Additional Information

© 2017 American Physical Society. (Received 12 July 2017; published 29 September 2017) The authors thank Luis Nieves-Rosado for his contributions to this work as part of the Undergraduate Research Program at the California Institute of Technology. S.C.T. acknowledges support from the Gates Millennium Scholars Fellowship and the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant No. DGE-1144469. This work was also supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. CBET 1437570.

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevFluids.2.094305.pdf

Submitted - 1709.05461

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Created:
August 19, 2023
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October 17, 2023