Abstract

A polymer brush is a passive medium. At equilibrium the knowledge of its chemical composition and thickness is enough for a full system characterization. However, when the brush is exposed to fluid flow it reveals a much more intriguing nature, in which filamentous protrusions and the way they interact among themselves and with the surrounding fluid are of outmost importance. Here we investigate such a rich behavior via numerical simulations. We focus on the brush hydrodynamic response at low Reynolds numbers, observing a significant fluid flow reduction inside a polymer-brush coated channel. We find that the reduction of the flow inside the channel is significantly larger than what would happen if the brush effect consisted only in reducing the effective channel width. This amplified reduction is understood as being due to the morphological instability of the brush-liquid interface which is shown to have an elastic origin: the mechanical stress acting on the brush due to the imposed flow is partially released by the interface modulation. In turn, this modulation dissipates more energy than a flat interface in the surrounding fluid, causing a reduction of flow velocity. Our results and interpretations provide an explanation for recent experimental measurements.

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