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arxiv: 1907.07444 · v1 · pith:4PFVMDLQnew · submitted 2019-07-17 · ❄️ cond-mat.soft

Adapting the Teubner reciprocal relations for stokeslet objects

classification ❄️ cond-mat.soft
keywords velocitycontributionsmethodshapestokesletbodygivenmotion
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Self-propelled colloidal swimmers move by pushing the adjacent fluid backwards. The resulting motion of an asymmetric body depends on the profile of pushing velocity over its surface. We describe a method of predicting the motion arising from arbitrary velocity profiles over a given body shape, using a discrete-source "stokeslet" representation. The net velocity and angular velocity is a sum of contributions from each point on the surface. The contributions from a given point depend only on the shape. We give a numerical method to find these contributions in terms of the stokeslet positions defining the shape. Each contribution is determined by linear operations on the Oseen interaction matrix between pairs of stokeslets. We first adapt the Lorentz Reciprocal Theorem to discrete sources. We then use the theorem to implement the method of Teubner[1] to determine electrophoretic mobilities of nonuniformly charged bodies.

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  1. Continuum-statistical dynamics of colloidal suspensions under kinematic reversibility

    cond-mat.soft 2026-02 unverdicted novelty 7.0

    A continuum framework shows Onsager reciprocity and colloidal diffusion coefficients emerge directly from the Lorentz reciprocal theorem applied to sedimentation flow problems.