Abstract

This paper describes how the collocation technique previously developed by the authors for treating both unbounded (Gluckman, Pfeffer & Weinbaum 1971; Leichtberg, Weinbaum, Pfeffer & Gluckman 1976) and bounded (Leichtberg, Pfeffer & Weinbaum 1976) multiparticle axisymmetric Stokes flows can be extended to handle a wide variety of non-axisymmetric creeping-motion problems with planar symmetry where the boundaries conform to more than a single orthogonal co-ordinate system. The present paper examines in detail the strong hydrodynamic interaction between two or more closely spaced identical spheres in a plane. The various two-sphere configurations provide a convenient means of carefully testing the accuracy and convergence of the numerical solution technique for three dimensional flow with known exact spherical bipolar solutions.The important difficulty encountered in applying the collocation technique to multi-particle non-axisymmetric flows is that the selection of boundary points is rather sensitive to the flow orientation. Despite this shortcoming one is able to obtain solutions for the quasi-steady particle velocities and drag for as many as 15 spheres in less than 30 s on an IBM 370/168 computer. The method not only gives accurate global results, but is able to predict the local fluid velocity and to resolve fine features of the flow such as the presence of separated regions of closed streamlines. Time-dependent numerical solutions are also presented for various three-sphere assemblages falling in a vertical plane. These solutions, in which the motion of each sphere is traced for several hundred diameters, are found to be in very good agreement with experimental measurements. The concluding section of the paper describes how the present collocation procedure can be extended to a number of important unsolved three-dimensional problems in Stokes flow with planar symmetry such as the arbitrary off-axis motion of a sphere in a circular cylinder or between parallel walls, or the motion of a neutrally buoyant particle at the entrance to a slit or pore.

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