Abstract

Many biological fluids display shear-thinning rheology, where the viscosity decreases with an increasing shear rate. To better understand how this non-Newtonian rheology affects the motion of biological and artificial micro-swimmers, recent efforts have begun to seek answers to fundamental questions about active bodies in shear-thinning fluids. Previous analyses based on a squirmer model have revealed non-trivial variations of propulsion characteristics in a shear-thinning fluid via the reciprocal theorem. However, the reciprocal theorem approach does not provide knowledge about the flow surrounding the squirmer. In this work, we fill in this missing information by calculating the non-Newtonian correction to the flow analytically in the asymptotic limit of small Carreau number. In particular, we investigate the local effect due to viscosity reduction and the non-local effect due to induced changes in the flow; we then quantify their relative importance to locomotion in a shear-thinning fluid. Our results demonstrate cases where the non-local effect can be more significant than the local effect. These findings suggest that caution should be exercised when developing physical intuition from the local viscosity distribution alone around a swimmer in a shear-thinning fluid.

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