Direction-dependent dynamics of colloidal particle pairs and the Stokes-Einstein relation in quasi-two-dimensional fluids
ORAL
Abstract
Hydrodynamic interactions are important for diverse fluids, especially those with low Reynolds number such as microbial and particle-laden suspensions, and proteins diffusing in membranes. Unfortunately, while far-field (asymptotic) hydrodynamic interactions are fully understood in two- and three-dimensions, near-field interactions are not, and thus our understanding of motions in dense fluid suspensions is still lacking. In this contribution, we experimentally explore the hydrodynamic correlations between particles in quasi-two-dimensional colloidal fluids in the near-field. Surprisingly, the measured displacement and relaxation of particle pairs in the body frame exhibit direction-dependent dynamics that can be connected quantitatively to the measured near-field hydrodynamic interactions. These findings, in turn, suggest a mechanism for how and when hydrodynamics can lead to a breakdown of the ubiquitous Stokes-Einstein relation (SER). We observe this breakdown, and we show that the direction-dependent breakdown of the SER is ameliorated along directions where hydrodynamic correlations are smallest. In total, the work uncovers significant ramifications of near-field hydrodynamics on transport and dynamic restructuring of fluids in two-dimensions.
*We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Department of Science and Technology (Government of India), INSPIRE fellowship IF200274 (NHB), Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar, India (CKM) and the Start-up Research Grant of Science and Engineering Research Board of Government of India through SRG/2021/001077 (CKM), US National Science Foundation through Grant DMR2003659 (AGY) and the MRSEC Grant DMR1720530 including its optical microscopy shared experimental facility (AGY).
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Publication:N. H. Barbhuiya, A.G. Yodh & Chandan K. Mishra, Direction-dependent dynamics of colloidal particle pairs and the Stokes-Einstein relation in quasi-two-dimensional fluids. Nat Commun 14, 5109 (2023).