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Numerical investigation of the formation and stability of homogeneous pairs of soft particles in inertial microfluidics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2022

Benjamin Owen
Affiliation:
School of Engineering, Institute for Multiscale Thermofluids, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3FB, UK
Timm Krüger*
Affiliation:
School of Engineering, Institute for Multiscale Thermofluids, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3FB, UK
*
Email address for correspondence: timm.krueger@ed.ac.uk

Abstract

We investigate the formation and stability of a pair of identical soft capsules in channel flow under mild inertia. We employ a combination of the lattice Boltzmann, finite element and immersed boundary methods to simulate the elastic particles in flow. Validation tests show excellent agreement with numerical results obtained by other research groups. Our results reveal new trajectory types that have not been observed for pairs of rigid particles. While particle softness increases the likelihood of a stable pair forming, the pair stability is determined by the lateral position of the particles. A key finding is that stabilisation of the axial distance occurs after lateral migration of the particles. During the later phase of pair formation, particles undergo damped oscillations that are independent of initial conditions. These damped oscillations are driven by a strong hydrodynamic coupling of the particle dynamics, particle inertia and viscous dissipation. While the frequency and damping coefficient of the oscillations depend on particle softness, the pair formation time is largely determined by the initial particle positions: the time to form a stable pair grows exponentially with the initial axial distance. Our results demonstrate that particle softness has a strong impact on the behaviour of particle pairs. The findings could have significant ramifications for microfluidic applications where a constant and reliable axial distance between particles is required, such as flow cytometry.

Information

Type
JFM Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Schematic of the first benchmark case: soft particle pair in shear flow. (a) Both particles are located on a plane parallel to the shear direction. (b) The shear rate is defined by the speed of the moving walls and their separation: $\dot {\gamma } = 2 u_{w} / L$. Both particles have the same distance from the walls, where one particle is closer to the bottom and the other closer to the top wall. Particles are initially separated by $\delta x_0$ and $\delta z_0$ along the $x$- and $z$-axes, respectively. Simulation parameters are reported in table 1.

Figure 1

Table 1. Parameters of the first benchmark case: soft particle pair in shear flow. See figure 1 for an illustration of the set-up. The shear rate $\dot {\gamma }$ depends on ${Re}_{p}$ according to (2.4), and the shear elasticity $\kappa _{s}$ is obtained from (2.6). The liquid density is set to $1$ in simulation units.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Trajectories of particle pairs in simple shear flow for various Reynolds numbers. Blue: ${Re}_{p} = 0.125$; orange: ${Re}_{p} = 0.375$; green: ${Re}_{p} = 0.575$; red: ${Re}_{p} = 0.75$. Black circles indicate the initial position of each particle. See figure 1 for the geometry set-up and table 1 for simulation parameters. (a) Comparison of our results for the neo-Hookean model with and without bending resistance with previous data (Doddi & Bagchi 2008). Squares are data points extracted from figure 8 in Doddi & Bagchi (2008) using WebPlotDigitizer v4.4. (b) Comparison between neo-Hookean and Skalak models with bending resistance obtained from our IB-LB-FE solver. (a) Comparison of our simulations with original results. (b) Comparison between neo-Hookean and Skalak models.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Schematic of the first benchmark case: soft particle migration in channel flow. (a) The arrow indicates the flow direction. The grey plane indicates the channel cross-section. (b) The particle is initially located away from the channel centreline. Simulation parameters are reported in table 2.

Figure 4

Table 2. Parameters of the second benchmark case: soft particle migration in channel flow. See figure 3 for an illustration of the set-up. The channel Reynolds number is varied by the body force and, therefore, $U_{max}$ via (2.5), and the Laplace number is controlled by the shear elasticity via (2.7). The liquid density is set to $1$ in simulation units.

Figure 5

Figure 4. Cross-sectional trajectories and lateral equilibrium positions of a single capsule in channel flow for various values of $La$ at (a) ${Re}_{c} = 10$ and (b) ${Re}_{c} = 100$. Our results are indicated by solid lines with circles, and dashed lines with squares show the results reported by Schaaf & Stark (2017). Grey symbols mark the initial capsule position, and colourful symbols indicate the final positions on the channel cross-section. The channel centreline is located at $(y,z) = (0, 0)$. Dashed grey lines are guides for the eyes.

Figure 6

Figure 5. Schematic of particle pairs in a rectangular duct. Parameter values are given in § 4.1. (a) The flow is along the $x$-axis (blue arrow). Particles are initially located on the mid-plane with $y = \text {const.}$ (indicated by grey plane). (b) Depending on their initial position along the $x$-axis, we distinguish between the leading and the lagging particle.

Figure 7

Figure 6. Typical snapshots at selected points in time and space for each trajectory type observed for soft particles. Cases (ad) have been previously observed for rigid particles as well, while cases (ef) have not. The initially leading/lagging particle is shown in red/blue, respectively. Note that the axial distances between different snapshots are not to scale. The six interaction types are characterised in more detail in table 3. (a) Swap & scatter. (b) Pass & scatter. (c) Capture. (d) Scatter. (e) Swap & capture. (f) Pass & capture.

Figure 8

Table 3. Descriptions of trajectory types of soft particle pairs with indication of whether this type is also observed for rigid particle pairs. Scatter means that the axial distance between particles grows until particles stop interacting with each other. Capture means that the axial distance is bound. Figure 6 visualises some example cases.

Figure 9

Figure 7. Particle interaction types as a function of Laplace number, initial axial distance $\delta x_0$ and initial lateral positions $z_0$ for homogeneous pairs. The $x$- and $y$-axes of each panel indicate the lateral initial positions of the lagging and leading particles with respect to the channel centreline ($z_0 = 0$). The symbols indicate the interaction type as defined in table 3 and shown in figure 6. Symbols with a white background indicate a scattering trajectory. A dark grey background denotes a stable pair, while a light grey background indicates a partially stable pair. The dashed boxes define those configurations that are analysed in more detail in figure 8.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Time evolution of the axial distance $\delta x$ for various initial lateral positions of the lagging particle (shown in different colours) for (a) ${La} = 10$ and (b) ${La} = 100$. The line style denotes the resulting trajectory type. In all cases, $z_0^{lead} = 0.4h$ and $\delta x_0 = 3a$.

Figure 11

Figure 9. Lateral motion of soft particles for $\delta x_0 = 3a$ and various Laplace numbers. (a) Time evolution of single, leading and lagging particles. Rigid limits extracted from Schaaf et al. (2019) for lateral equilibrium positions of rigid particles under the same flow conditions. (b) Zoomed area of (a) in the region of transition between off-centre and centreline lateral equilibrium positions. (a) Time evolution of lateral particle position. (b) Lateral equilibrium positions.

Figure 12

Figure 10. Time evolution of axial distance for various Laplace numbers. The initial conditions are the same as in figure 9.

Figure 13

Figure 11. Time evolution of a single particle and particle pair motion with particles of ${La} = 15$ and $\chi = 0.2$. Initial lateral positions of the particles are identical to figures 9 and 10 in non-dimensional units while the initial axial distance is equal to figures 9 and 10 in terms of channel height ($\delta x_0 = 6a$) and in terms of particle radius ($\delta x_0 = 3a$). (a) Time evolution of lateral particle positions. (b) Time evolution of axial particle distance.

Figure 14

Figure 12. (a) Lateral equilibrium positions for leading particle (blue), lagging particle (green) and a single particle under the same conditions (red). Note that leading and lagging particle have essentially the same lateral equilibrium positions and green markers are not always visible. Crosses indicate the difference between the lateral positions of the leading particle in a pair and the single particle. (b) Axial equilibrium distance. (c) Focusing times for the leading particle in a pair in the lateral direction and for the axial distance. The focusing time is defined as the time until the last occurrence of the position/distance being outside its equilibrium value $\pm$ the specified tolerance. Three different tolerances are included to highlight the general trends. (a) Lateral equilibrium positions. (b) Axial equilibrium distances. (c) Focusing time of particles with varying Laplace number for lateral equilibrium position and axial distance.

Figure 15

Figure 13. Contributions to the overall formation of stable particle pairs.

Figure 16

Figure 14. Time evolution of (a) lateral particle positions and (b) axial distance between particles at ${La} = 36$ and $\chi = 0.4$. Initial lateral positions are set to $z_{eq}$. The initial axial distance is increased until a captured pair does not form before $t/t_{ad} \geq 10\,000$.

Figure 17

Figure 15. (a) Axial attraction time $t_{ax}$ at which the axial distance reaches its first minimum as denoted by vertical lines in figure 14(b). The solid line is an exponential $\propto \exp (0.85 \delta x_0/a)$. (b) Time evolution of lateral position of the lagging particle for different initial axial distances. (c) Time evolution of axial distance for different initial axial distances. (a) Axial attraction time as a function of initial axial distance. (b) Lateral position of the lagging particle vs shifted time $t' = t - t_{ax}$. (c) Axial distance vs shifted time $t' = t - t_{ax}$.

Figure 18

Figure 16. Time evolution of (a) lateral particle position and (b) axial distance at ${La} = 90$, $\chi = 0.4$ and $\delta x_0 = 3a \approx \delta x_{eq}$. Initial lateral positions obey $z_0^{lag} = -z_0^{lead}$ and are varied in the range $[0.1h, 0.45h]$. (c) Lateral centre of mass position of the pair vs axial distance; the inset shows the zoomed area close to initial and equilibrium positions. (d) Time evolution of the half-lateral distance between particles compared with trajectories of single particles. Note that a reduced selection of initial positions are included in (c) to improve readability. The line colours in all panels correspond to the legend in (a). (a) Lateral positions vs time. (b) Axial distance vs time. (c) Lateral centre of mass position vs axial distance. (d) Half-lateral distance vs time.

Figure 19

Figure 17. Oscillation frequency $\varOmega$ as a function of (a) Laplace number, (b) initial lateral position (${La} = 90$) and (c) initial axial distance (${La} = 36$). The inset in (a) shows results from a fast Fourier transform of the time data for a selection of Laplace numbers (colours correspond to those in figure 10a). (a) Frequency as function of softness. (b) Frequency as a function of initial lateral position (${La} = 90$). (c) Frequency as a function of initial axial distance (${La} = 36$).

Figure 20

Figure 18. Damping ratio $\gamma$ as a function of (a) Laplace number, (b) initial lateral position (${La} = 90$) and (c) initial axial distance (${La} = 36$). The inset in (a) depicts the process of obtaining the damping coefficient $\gamma$ (see main text for details). (a) Damping as a function of softness. (b) Damping as a function of initial lateral position (${La} = 90$). (c) Damping as a function of initial axial distance (${La} = 36$).

Figure 21

Figure 19. Focusing time for lateral position of the leading particle and the axial distance as a function of (a) Laplace number, (b) initial lateral position (${La} = 90$) and (c) initial axial distance (${La} = 36$). (a) Focusing time as function of softness. (b) Focusing time as a function of initial lateral position. (c) Focusing time as a function of initial axial distance.