50 research outputs found
Migration of semiflexible polymers in microcapillary flow
The non-equilibrium structural and dynamical properties of a semiflexible
polymer confined in a cylindrical microchannel and exposed to a Poiseuille flow
is studied by mesoscale hydrodynamic simulations. For a polymer with a length
half of its persistence length, large variations in orientation and
conformations are found as a function of radial distance and flow strength. In
particular, the polymer exhibits U-shaped conformations near the channel
center. Hydrodynamic interactions lead to strong cross-streamline migration.
Outward migration is governed by the polymer orientation and the corresponding
anisotropy in its diffusivity. Strong tumbling motion is observed, with a
tumbling time which exhibits the same dependence on Peclet number as a polymer
in shear flow.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, accepted by EP
Flow-Induced Helical Coiling of Semiflexible Polymers in Structured Microchannels
The conformations of semiflexible (bio)polymers are studied in flow through
geometrically structured microchannels. Using mesoscale hydrodynamics
simulations, we show that the polymer undergoes a rod-to-helix transition as it
moves from the narrow high-velocity region into the wide low-velocity region of
the channel. The transient helix formation is the result of a non-equilibrium
and non-stationary buckling transition of the semiflexible polymer, which is
subjected to a compressive force originating from the fluid-velocity variation
in the channel. The helix properties depend on the diameter ratio of the
channel, the polymer bending rigidity, and the flow strength.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev. Let
Semiflexible polymer conformation, distribution and migration in microcapillary flows
The flow behavior of a semiflexible polymer in microchannels is studied using
Multiparticle Collision Dynamics (MPC), a particle-based hydrodynamic
simulation technique. Conformations, distributions, and radial cross-streamline
migration are investigated for various bending rigidities, with persistence
lengths Lp in the range 0.5 < Lp/Lr < 30. The flow behavior is governed by the
competition between a hydrodynamic lift force and steric wall-repulsion, which
lead to migration away from the wall, and a locally varying flow-induced
orientation, which drives polymer away from the channel center and towards the
wall. The different dependencies of these effects on the polymer bending
rigidity and the flow velocity results in a complex dynamical behavior.
However, a generic effect is the appearance of a maximum in the monomer and the
center-of-mass distributions, which occurs in the channel center for small flow
velocities, but moves off-center at higher velocities.Comment: in press at J. Phys. Condens. Matte
