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1.
Soft Matter ; 20(13): 3007-3020, 2024 Mar 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38495021

RESUMO

Biological and artificial microswimmers often have to propel through a variety of environments, ranging from heterogeneous suspending media to strong geometrical confinement. Under confinement, local flow fields generated by microswimmers, and steric and hydrodynamic interactions with their environment determine the locomotion. We propose a squirmer-like model to describe the motion of microswimmers in cylindrical microchannels, where propulsion is generated by a fixed surface slip velocity. The model is studied using an approximate analytical solution for cylindrical swimmer shapes, and by numerical hydrodynamics simulations for spherical and spheroidal shapes. For the numerical simulations, we employ the dissipative particle dynamics method for modelling fluid flow. Both the analytical model and simulations show that the propulsion force increases with increasing confinement. However, the swimming velocity under confinement remains lower than the swimmer speed without confinement for all investigated conditions. In simulations, different swimming modes (i.e. pusher, neutral, puller) are investigated, and found to play a significant role in the generation of propulsion force when a swimmer approaches a dead end of a capillary tube. Propulsion generation in confined systems is local, such that the generated flow field generally vanishes beyond the characteristic size of the swimmer. These results contribute to a better understanding of microswimmer force generation and propulsion under strong confinement, including the motion in porous media and in narrow channels.

2.
Soft Matter ; 20(29): 5687-5702, 2024 Jul 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38639062

RESUMO

Bacteria in biofilms form complex structures and can collectively migrate within mobile aggregates, which is referred to as swarming. This behavior is influenced by a combination of various factors, including morphological characteristics and propulsive forces of swimmers, their volume fraction within a confined environment, and hydrodynamic and steric interactions between them. In our study, we employ the squirmer model for microswimmers and the dissipative particle dynamics method for fluid modeling to investigate the collective motion of swimmers in thin films. The film thickness permits a free orientation of non-spherical squirmers, but constraints them to form a two-layered structure at maximum. Structural and dynamic properties of squirmer suspensions confined within the slit are analyzed for different volume fractions of swimmers, motility types (e.g., pusher, neutral squirmer, puller), and the presence of a rotlet dipolar flow field, which mimics the counter-rotating flow generated by flagellated bacteria. Different states are characterized, including a gas-like phase, swarming, and motility-induced phase separation, as a function of increasing volume fraction. Our study highlights the importance of an anisotropic swimmer shape, hydrodynamic interactions between squirmers, and their interaction with the walls for the emergence of different collective behaviors. Interestingly, the formation of collective structures may not be symmetric with respect to the two walls. Furthermore, the presence of a rotlet dipole significantly mitigates differences in the collective behavior between various swimmer types. These results contribute to a better understanding of the formation of bacterial biofilms and the emergence of collective states in confined active matter.

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