Viscous tweezers: controlling particles with viscosity
ORAL
Abstract
Control of particle motion is generally achieved by applying an external field that acts directly on each particle. In this talk, we propose a global way to manipulate the motion of a particle by dynamically changing the properties of the fluid in which it is immersed. We exemplify this principle by considering a small particle sinking in an anisotropic fluid whose viscosity depends on the shear axis. In the Stokes regime, the motion of an immersed object is fully determined by the viscosity of the fluid through the mobility matrix, which we explicitly compute for a pushpin-shaped particle. Rather than falling upright under the force of gravity, as in an isotropic fluid, the pushpin tilts to the side, sedimenting at an angle determined by the viscosity anisotropy axis. By changing this axis, we demonstrate control over the pushpin orientation as it sinks, even in the presence of noise, using a closed feedback loop. This strategy to control particle motion, that we dub viscous tweezers, could be experimentally realized in a fluid comprised of elongated molecules by suitably changing their global orientation.
*T.K. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant No. 1746045. M.F. acknowledges support from the Simons Foundation, the National Science Foundation under grant DMR-2118415, and a MRSEC-funded Kadanoff–Rice fellowship (DMR-2011854). V.V. acknowledges support from the Simons Foundation, the Complex Dynamics and Systems Program of the Army Research Office undergrant W911NF-19-1-0268, the National Science Foundation under grant DMR-2118415 and the University of Chicago Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, which is funded by the National Science Foundation under award no. DMR-2011854.
–
Presenters
-
Tali Khain
- University of Chicago