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arxiv: 1705.05978 · v1 · pith:CAOMCG2Lnew · submitted 2017-05-17 · ❄️ cond-mat.soft · physics.flu-dyn

Kinematic irreversibility in surfactant-laden interfaces

classification ❄️ cond-mat.soft physics.flu-dyn
keywords surfaceboundaryinterfacialkinematicmonolayerviscosityallowsanalog
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The surface shear viscosity of an insoluble surfactant monolayer often depends strongly on its surface pressure. Here, we show that a particle moving within a bounded monolayer breaks the kinematic reversibility of low-Reynolds-number flows. The Lorentz reciprocal theorem allows such irreversibilities to be computed without solving the full nonlinear equations, giving the leading-order contribution of surface-pressure-dependent surface viscosity. In particular, we show that a disk translating or rotating near an interfacial boundary experiences a force in the direction perpendicular to that boundary. In unbounded monolayers, coupled modes of motion can also lead to non-intuitive trajectories, which we illustrate using an interfacial analog of the Magnus effect. This perturbative approach can be extended to more complex geometries, and to 2D suspensions more generally.

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