scholarly journals Low Reynolds Number Swimming Near Interfaces in Multi-Fluid Media

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (19) ◽  
pp. 9109
Author(s):  
Avriel Cartwright ◽  
Jian Du

Microorganisms often swim within heterogeneous fluid media composed of multiple materials with very different properties. The swimming speed is greatly affected by the composition and rheology of the fluidic environment. In addition, biological locomotions are also strongly influenced by the presence of phase boundaries and free interfaces, across which physical properties of the fluid media may vary significantly. Using a two-fluid immersed boundary method, we investigate the classical Taylor’s swimming sheet problem near interfaces within multi-fluid media. The accuracy of the methodology is illustrated through comparisons with analytical solutions. Our simulation results indicate that the interface dynamics and phase separation in the multi-fluid mixture are closely coupled with the movement of the swimmer. Depending on the interface location, the frictional coefficient, and the multi-fluid composition, the swimmer can move faster or slower than that in a single phase fluid.

2011 ◽  
Vol 69 (4) ◽  
pp. 842-858 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yibao Li ◽  
Eunok Jung ◽  
Wanho Lee ◽  
Hyun Geun Lee ◽  
Junseok Kim

2013 ◽  
Vol 136 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Haobo Hua ◽  
Jaemin Shin ◽  
Junseok Kim

In this paper, we review and compare the level set, phase-field, and immersed boundary methods for incompressible two-phase flows. The models are based on modified Navier–Stokes and interface evolution equations. We present the basic concepts behind these approaches and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each method. We also present numerical solutions of the three methods and perform characteristic numerical experiments for two-phase fluid flows.


Author(s):  
Mohammad Robiul Hossan ◽  
Prashanta Dutta ◽  
Robert Dillon

In this paper, we investigate the mechanism of two dimensional DC dielectrophoresis (DEP) using a hybrid immersed interface-immersed boundary method where both electric and hydrodynamic forces are obtained with interface-resolved approach instead of point-particle method. Immersed interface method is employed to predict DC electric field in a fluid media with suspended particles while immersed boundary method is used to study particle transport in a fluid media. The Maxwell stress tensor approach is adopted to obtain dielectrophoretic force. This hybrid numerical scheme demonstrates the underlying physics of positive and negative dielectrophoresis, and explains their contribution in particle assembly with consideration of size, initial configurations and electrical properties of particles as well as fluid media. The results show that the positive DEP provides accelerating motion while negative DEP provides decelerating motion depending on the electrode configurations and initial particle positions. The results also show that the local nonuniformity in electric field induced by the suspended particles guides the particles to form stable chain. Both positive and negative DEP can contribute in the process of particle assembly formation based on the properties of particles and fluid media. This hybrid immersed interface-immersed boundary scheme could be an efficient numerical tool for understanding fundamental mechanism of dielectrophoresis as well as designing and optimization of DEP based microfluidic devices.


Author(s):  
Chloé Mimeau ◽  
Iraj Mortazavi ◽  
Georges-Henri Cottet

In this work, a coupling of vortex methods with penalization methods is proposed in order to accurately and easily handle solid-fluid-porous media. This immersed boundary approach indeed maintains the efficiency and the robustness of vortex methods and allows to model the three different media without prescribing any boundary condition. In this paper, we propose an application of this immersed boundary method to passive flow control around a semi-circular cylinder, realized adding a porous sheath on the obstacle surface in order to smooth the flow dynamics.


Author(s):  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Yan Zhang ◽  
Minghu Jiang

It’s an effective method to get higher oil production efficiency during offshore petroleum production by separating some water from produced fluid and re-injecting it in some given formation using down hole separators. However some kinds of oil, water, gas and sand will enter the separator in the down hole separating system as a mixture because of the complex environment down hole. In oilfield onshore multiphase separators will be a good answer to this puzzle. But it becomes almost impossible to use multi-phase separators down hole because of the complex condition and the limitation of diameter of well bore. However multi-grade separators can be arranged in bridge or in series and some path-breaking theoretical and experimental investigation related has been done which based on modular design. This not only gives the answer to the puzzle to arrange multi-grade separators, but also bring it to be possible to separate different separating media with different separator. And this takes role of multiphase separator limited by maximum diameter down hole. Some new results are introduced in this paper about the implement method of separating gas/oil/water in different grade of separators which are arrayed in series. It shows different conditions for down hole separators simulating by CFD technique which can be a perfect reference for design of separators and separating systems.


2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (04) ◽  
pp. 1450004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruofan Qiu ◽  
Anlin Wang ◽  
Qiwei Gong ◽  
Tao Jiang

In this paper, two-phase fluid mixture flow in rectangular two-inlet cavity is studied using lattice Boltzmann method (LBM). To simulate two-phase fluids with large viscosity difference, the pseudo-potential model is improved. The improved model is verified for surface tension through Laplace's law and shown much better performance in simulating fluids with large viscosity difference than pseudo-potential model. The multiple-relaxation-time (MRT) scheme is used to enhance numerical stability. Then the two-phase fluid mixture flow with same and different viscosity in two-inlet cavity is simulated by present lattice Boltzmann (LB) model, pseudo-potential LB model and volume-of-fluid (VOF) method, respectively. The comparison of these numerical results shows that LB model is more suitable for such kind of flow than VOF method, since it can reflect repulsive forces and transitional region of two-phase fluids in dynamic process. Moreover, it also shows that present LB model has better dynamic stability than pseudo-potential model. Furthermore, simulations of the two-phase fluid mixture flow with different fluid viscosities, inlet velocities, inlet heights and outlet positions using present LB model are presented, exhibiting their effect to contact area of fluids.


Author(s):  
Mohammad Robiul Hossan ◽  
Prashanta Dutta

In this paper, we present a comprehensive study of dielectrophoretic particle assembly using hybrid immersed interface-immersed boundary method where both dielectrophoretic and hydrodynamic forces are evaluated with interface resolved approach instead of point-particle method. Immersed interface method is employed to capture physics of electrostatics in a fluid media with embedded particles, while immersed boundary method is used to study hydrodynamics with rigid and/or flexible immersed boundaries. Unlike existing studies, dielectrophoretic force is obtained using Maxwell’s stress tensor; a comparative study between Maxwell stress tensor and effective dipole moment methods are presented. This hybrid method is employed to demonstrate the dielectrophoretic particle assembly for both similar and dissimilar particles. In a fluid media, the similar particles form a chain parallel to the applied electric field, while the dissimilar particles form a chain perpendicular to the applied electric field. These results are consistent with the recent experimental observations.


Author(s):  
San-Yih Lin ◽  
Ya-Hsien Chin ◽  
Yi-Cheng Chen

A pressure correction method is developed to simulate fluid-particle interaction flows. In this Paper, the three-dimensional solid-fluid mixture flows are investigated. The pressure corrected method coupled with the direct-forcing immersed boundary (IB) and the volume of fluid (VOF) methods is used to simulate the mixture flows. A discrete element method (DEM) together with a multi-time-step algorithm is introduced into the pressure correction method to calculate the forces and torques between solid bodies and between solid bodies and walls. As a demonstration of the efficient and capabilities of the present method, four test cases are simulated. They include sedimentation of one spherical particle in an enclosure, collapse of six solid-cylinder layers, two-dimensional solid-fluid mixture flow, and three-dimensional solid-fluid mixture flow.


2013 ◽  
Vol 257 ◽  
pp. 36-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yibao Li ◽  
Ana Yun ◽  
Dongsun Lee ◽  
Jaemin Shin ◽  
Darae Jeong ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Anne V. Thomas ◽  
Colin J. Bray ◽  
Edward T. C. Spooner

ABSTRACTJahns and Burnham (1969) proposed that the internal evolution of zoned granitic pegmatites could be explained by crystallisation from water-saturated melts which evolved to produce systems with a melt plus a separate aqueous fluid. Examination of microthermometric properties, chemical compositions and gas contents of solid-liquid-vapour inclusions from a number of the zones of the Tanco rare element granitic pegmatite places constraints on fluid evolution within the framework of the crystallisation history of the pegmatite, and contributes to an examination of the Jahns–Burnham proposal.Initial crystallisation at Tanco was from the wall rock inwards, producing the relatively unfractionated wall zone (potassium feldspar–quartz-albite-muscovite). Textural evidence, and an upward increase in the level of geochemical fractionation, indicate that much, but not all, of the subsequent crystallisation of the pegmatite was from the base upwards. Inclusions trapped by wall zone and metasomatic wall rock tourmaline indicate that the pegmatite was intruded as a 2 phase alumino-silicate melt/fluid mixture at ∼720°C, with an initial fluid composition of ∼98mol.% H2O (containing 2 equiv. mo1% NaCl) and <2mol% CO2 (containing <5 equiv. mo1% CH4). These observations indicate that both melt and fluid were present from the start of crystallisation (Jahns & Burnham 1969), but show that CO2 and dissolved salts were important additional components of the fluid phase. The bulk of the pegmatite then crystallised in the range 600-470°C from melts and fluids with continued low levels of CO2 (2-3mol.%) and approximately constant salinity (∼7 equiv. wt.% NaCl dissolved in the aqueous phase). Crystal-rich inclusions, which may represent trapped alumino-silicate melts, are present throughout pegmatite crystallisation down to temperatures as low as ∼262°C. The final stages of crystallisation resulted in the formation of the beryl fringe at 291 ± 33°C and the lower part of the quartz zone at 262 ± 29°C. By the later stages the fluid had cooled through an H2O-CO2– dissolved salt solvus resulting in H2O-CO2 phase separation. Gas chromatographic analysis of the fluid components in the vug quartz, beryl fringe and lower part of the quartz zone shows that the inclusions contain H2O, CO2, CH4, N2, CO, Ar, and trace C2H6 in the beryl fringe. Measured CH4:CO2 ratios of 0·0060 (±0·0015) for the beryl fringe (twenty crushes on five samples) and 0·0042 (±0.0021) for the quartz zone (thirty crushes on six samples) yield fO2 estimates of 1×10−36 and 2 × 10−38, respectively, which are just above QFM at these temperatures.


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