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arxiv: 2605.22982 · v1 · pith:XC2FY2WRnew · submitted 2026-05-21 · ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn

Transient and asymptotic Taylor--Aris dispersion of Brownian rods in arbitrary regular-polygonal ducts

Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 05:21 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ⚛️ physics.flu-dyn
keywords Taylor-Aris dispersionBrownian rodspolygonal ductsshear alignmenttransverse mixingJeffery-Brownian closuredispersion in ducts
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The pith

Shear alignment of Brownian rods in polygonal ducts enhances the Taylor-Aris dispersion coefficient primarily by reducing transverse mixing.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper formulates Taylor-Aris dispersion for dilute Brownian rods in regular-polygonal ducts of any side number. At each cross-sectional point a local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure supplies four transport fields that feed a conservative two-dimensional transverse operator whose zero mode is a non-uniform invariant density. This replaces uniform area weighting in the Taylor reduction and separates the effects of rod alignment on mean speed and on transverse relaxation. Alignment produces only a small non-monotone shift in mean speed but a larger enhancement of the Taylor coefficient; normalization by the spherical-particle coefficient for the same geometry removes most passive shape dependence and shows convergence to the fully aligned limit.

Core claim

Alignment produces only a small, non-monotone shift in mean speed, but gives a larger enhancement of the Taylor coefficient by reducing transverse mixing. Normalization by the same-geometry spherical coefficient removes most passive shape dependence and exposes the approach to the fully aligned transverse-mixing limit. Finite regular polygons converge smoothly to the circular-pipe branch, whereas low-sided polygons retain distinct shear-sampling signatures.

What carries the argument

The local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure at each cross-section point, which yields two transverse diffusivities, axial diffusivity and signed shear-axial cross coefficient that together define a conservative 2D transverse operator whose invariant density weights the Taylor-Aris cell problem.

If this is right

  • Alignment enhances the Taylor coefficient more than it alters mean axial speed.
  • Normalizing the Taylor coefficient by the spherical value isolates the alignment effect and shows most shape dependence vanishes.
  • Regular polygons of increasing sides converge to the circular pipe result.
  • Low-sided polygons keep distinct signatures from shear sampling.
  • Transient releases excite different transverse modes but all decay to the same asymptotic coefficient.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The non-uniform invariant density weighting could be applied to dispersion of other anisotropic particles in non-circular conduits.
  • The separation of sampling and mixing effects suggests possible strategies for controlling dispersion via channel shape in microfluidic settings.
  • The biorthogonal spectral method for transients may extend to other initial conditions or time-dependent flows not treated here.

Load-bearing premise

The local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure remains accurate for dilute rods at every point in an arbitrary regular-polygonal cross-section where the shear frame rotates.

What would settle it

Direct comparison of the predicted Taylor coefficient in a square or triangular duct against Brownian dynamics simulations or experiments with dilute rod suspensions.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.22982 by Jingsen Feng, Xu Chu.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Geometry-to-shear map for representative cross-sections. The rows correspond to 𝑁 = 3, 4, 6 and ∞. The columns show the polygonal domain 𝛺𝑁 , the normalized Poiseuille velocity 𝑢𝑁 , the normalized shear magnitude 𝜎𝑁 = |∇⊥𝑢𝑁 |/max𝛺𝑁 |∇⊥𝑢𝑁 |, and the down-gradient shear direction 𝒆𝑠 . The circular row gives 𝑢∞ = 1 − 𝑟 2 and 𝒆𝑠 = 𝒆𝑟 . interactions with the wall are therefore neglected; these mechanisms can pr… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Local Jeffery–Brownian transport closure. The panels show 𝐷𝑠 (𝑞; 𝑝), 𝐷𝜂 (𝑞; 𝑝), 𝐵(𝑞; 𝑝) and 𝐴(𝑞; 𝑝) as functions of the local shear strength 𝑞 for different aspect ratios 𝑝. Spheres give the constant isotropic branch 𝐷𝑠 = 𝐷𝜂 = 𝐵 = 1 and 𝐴 = 0. Increasing 𝑝 strengthens the shear-induced redistribution of translational diffusivity. 3. Cross-sectional transport equation and invariant density The local closure… view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Cross-sectional transport fields for moderate rods and moderate orientational shear, 𝑝 = 10 and 𝑃𝑒𝑟 = 10. The rows correspond to 𝑁 = 3, 4, 6 and ∞. The columns show 𝐷𝑠 , 𝐷𝜂, 𝐵, 𝐴 and |𝛺𝑁 |𝜌𝑁 . the non-monotone local curve in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p014_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Cross-sectional transport fields for a larger aspect ratio and stronger alignment, 𝑝 = 100 and 𝑃𝑒𝑟 = 50. The rows correspond to 𝑁 = 3, 7, 11 and ∞. The columns are the same as in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Cross-sectional transport fields near the slender-rod regime, 𝑝 = 1000 and 𝑃𝑒𝑟 = 100. The rows correspond to 𝑁 = 3, 9, 15 and ∞. The columns are 𝐷𝑠 , 𝐷𝜂, 𝐵, 𝐴 and |𝛺𝑁 |𝜌𝑁 . radial invariant measure of the circular tube is replaced here by the two-dimensional density 𝜌𝑁 (𝒙). 4.1. Cross-sectionally averaged concentration and mean speed The one-dimensional concentration is the cross-sectional mass per unit ax… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Leading mean transport speed ¯𝑢𝑁 as a function of the rotational Peclet number ´ 𝑃𝑒𝑟 . Each panel corresponds to one regular polygon, 𝑁 = 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 12. Curves show aspect ratios 𝑝 = 1, 2, 10, 100, 1000, ∞. Open markers show independent evaluations at selected 𝑃𝑒𝑟 values using the spectral discretization described in Section 6 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p022_6.png] view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Taylor-dispersion enhancement 𝑅𝜅,𝑁 = 𝜅𝑁 /𝜅𝑠,𝑁 as a function of 𝑃𝑒𝑟 . The panel layout and aspect￾ratio curves are the same as in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p023_7.png] view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: Normalized Taylor-dispersion enhancement 𝐸𝑁 = (𝜅𝑁 /𝜅𝑠,𝑁 − 1)/(𝜅𝑚,𝑁 /𝜅𝑠,𝑁 − 1). Curves collect the polygonal data from [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p024_8.png] view at source ↗
Figure 9
Figure 9. Figure 9: Finite-𝑁 convergence of steady transport coefficients to the circular-pipe branch. The upper row shows |𝑢¯𝑁 /𝑢¯∞ − 1|. The lower row shows |𝑅𝜅,𝑁 /𝑅𝜅,∞ − 1|, where 𝑅𝜅,𝑁 = 𝜅𝑁 /𝜅𝑠,𝑁 . Columns correspond to 𝑝 = 10, 100, 1000, and curves correspond to 𝑃𝑒𝑟 = 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000 [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p025_9.png] view at source ↗
Figure 10
Figure 10. Figure 10: Transient cross-sectional relaxation for IC-A, a single off-centre pulse, at 𝑝 = 100, 𝑃𝑒 = 104 and 𝑃𝑒𝑟 = 10. Columns show 𝑡 ∗ = 0, 0.1, 1, 5, and rows show 𝑁 = 3, 4, 5, 7. The plotted field is 𝑐/𝑐max at the moving pulse centre. IC-A gives the most localized transverse injection among the three cases. At 𝑡 ∗ = 0, most of the mass is concentrated away from the centre and away from the wall. By 𝑡 ∗ = 0.1, mo… view at source ↗
Figure 11
Figure 11. Figure 11: Transient cross-sectional relaxation for IC-B, an unequal two-pulse mixture, at the same parameter values as [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p031_11.png] view at source ↗
Figure 12
Figure 12. Figure 12: Transient cross-sectional relaxation for IC-C, a broad skewed profile weighted by the invariant density, at the same parameter values as [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p032_12.png] view at source ↗
Figure 13
Figure 13. Figure 13: Transient variance growth and running Taylor coefficient for the cases in Figures 10–12. Panel (a) shows the axial variance 𝜎 2 𝑧 (𝑡) against 𝑡 ∗ . Panel (b) shows the running coefficient normalized by the case-specific long-time Taylor value 𝜅TA,𝑁 . Panel (a) shows the variance entering a regime in which 𝑑𝜎2 𝑧 /𝑑𝑡 is independent of the initial transverse profile for each polygon. The early growth rates d… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Taylor--Aris dispersion of Brownian rods in non-circular ducts is governed by a coupling absent from passive-scalar theory. Pressure-driven shear aligns the rods and makes translational diffusion tensorial, while duct geometry determines how this tensor is sampled across the cross-section. We formulate this problem for dilute rods in regular-polygonal ducts of arbitrary side number. At each cross-sectional point, a local shear-aligned Jeffery--Brownian closure gives four transport fields, namely two transverse diffusivities, a direct axial diffusivity and a signed shear--axial cross coefficient. Because the shear frame rotates through a polygon, these fields enter a conservative two-dimensional transverse operator rather than a radial scalar-diffusion problem. Its zero mode is a non-uniform invariant density, which replaces the area measure in the Taylor--Aris reduction and reduces, in the circular-pipe limit, to a weighting proportional to the inverse shear-direction diffusivity. The resulting cell problem separates the effects of rod alignment on streamline sampling and transverse relaxation. Alignment produces only a small, non-monotone shift in mean speed, but gives a larger enhancement of the Taylor coefficient by reducing transverse mixing. Normalization by the same-geometry spherical coefficient removes most passive shape dependence and exposes the approach to the fully aligned transverse-mixing limit. Finite regular polygons converge smoothly to the circular-pipe branch, whereas low-sided polygons retain distinct shear-sampling signatures. A biorthogonal spectral formulation resolves finite-time releases. Localized, multi-peaked and broad injections excite different non-zero transverse modes and exhibit different pre-asymptotic variance growth, but modal decay selects the common long-time Taylor--Aris coefficient given by the cell problem.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript formulates Taylor-Aris dispersion for dilute Brownian rods in regular-polygonal ducts of arbitrary side number. At each cross-sectional point a local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure supplies four transport fields (two transverse diffusivities, axial diffusivity, signed shear-axial cross term). These fields enter a conservative 2D transverse operator whose zero mode is a non-uniform invariant density that replaces the area measure in the Taylor-Aris reduction. The resulting cell problem separates alignment-induced changes in streamline sampling from changes in transverse relaxation. Alignment produces only a small non-monotone shift in mean speed but a larger enhancement of the Taylor coefficient by reducing transverse mixing. Normalization by the same-geometry spherical coefficient removes most passive shape dependence and exposes the approach to the fully aligned transverse-mixing limit. Finite polygons converge smoothly to the circular-pipe branch while low-sided polygons retain distinct shear-sampling signatures. A biorthogonal spectral formulation resolves finite-time releases and pre-asymptotic variance growth.

Significance. If the local-closure reduction holds, the work supplies a parameter-free extension of Taylor-Aris theory to anisotropic particles in non-circular ducts, with explicit separation of sampling versus mixing effects, recovery of the circular-pipe limit, and a spectral treatment of transients. The normalization procedure that isolates the aligned-mixing limit is a clear strength.

major comments (1)
  1. [formulation of transport fields and 2D cell problem] The central reduction to a 2D transverse cell problem is obtained by invoking the local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure at every point, including locations where the shear frame rotates continuously through the polygon. The manuscript provides neither an error estimate nor numerical validation for this approximation when the shear direction changes on scales comparable to rod length or rotational relaxation time, an assumption that is least secure near corners of low-sided polygons where geometry-induced sampling effects are strongest. This is load-bearing for the claim that the cell problem accurately captures both the mean speed and the Taylor coefficient (formulation paragraph and transport-field construction).

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 1 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and for isolating the central modeling assumption in our reduction. We respond to the single major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [formulation of transport fields and 2D cell problem] The central reduction to a 2D transverse cell problem is obtained by invoking the local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure at every point, including locations where the shear frame rotates continuously through the polygon. The manuscript provides neither an error estimate nor numerical validation for this approximation when the shear direction changes on scales comparable to rod length or rotational relaxation time, an assumption that is least secure near corners of low-sided polygons where geometry-induced sampling effects are strongest. This is load-bearing for the claim that the cell problem accurately captures both the mean speed and the Taylor coefficient (formulation paragraph and transport-field construction).

    Authors: We agree that the local closure is the load-bearing step and that its domain of validity should be stated more explicitly. The closure is introduced under the standard scale-separation assumption of the Taylor-Aris regime: rod length much smaller than both the duct hydraulic diameter and the distance over which the shear direction rotates appreciably. This assumption is already implicit in the dilute, long-time reduction performed in the paper. In the circular-pipe geometry the shear direction is uniform, so the closure is locally exact and the cell problem recovers the known result. For polygons we show that all computed quantities converge smoothly to the circular branch as the number of sides increases, furnishing an indirect consistency check. We will revise the formulation section to state the scale-separation hypothesis explicitly and to note that the approximation is expected to be least accurate near corners of low-sided polygons. A quantitative a-priori error estimate or a direct three-dimensional Brownian-dynamics validation of the closure in a spatially rotating shear field lies outside the scope of the present asymptotic analysis and would constitute a separate study. revision: partial

standing simulated objections not resolved
  • A rigorous error estimate or direct numerical validation of the local Jeffery-Brownian closure in regions of spatially varying shear direction.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; derivation self-contained against circular-pipe benchmark

full rationale

The paper introduces a local Jeffery-Brownian closure as an input modeling assumption at each cross-section point, then derives the four transport fields and the 2D transverse cell problem from the resulting conservative operator. The zero-mode weighting and Taylor-Aris coefficient follow directly from solving that cell problem; the circular-pipe limit is recovered as an independent consistency check rather than imposed by construction. No fitted parameters are relabeled as predictions, no self-citation chain supplies a uniqueness theorem, and no ansatz is smuggled via prior work. The reported alignment effects on mean speed and Taylor coefficient are therefore outputs of the derived equations, not tautological restatements of the inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the dilute-rod approximation and the validity of the local Jeffery-Brownian closure across a rotating shear frame; no free parameters or new physical entities are introduced in the abstract.

axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Dilute rod suspension allowing a local shear-aligned Jeffery-Brownian closure at every cross-sectional point
    Invoked to obtain the four transport fields that enter the transverse operator.
  • domain assumption Regular polygonal geometry produces a shear frame that rotates continuously around the cross-section
    Required for the conservative two-dimensional transverse operator rather than a radial scalar problem.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5832 in / 1400 out tokens · 51581 ms · 2026-05-25T05:21:00.412821+00:00 · methodology

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