Abstract

We study the dynamics of a squirmer in a nematic liquid crystal using the multiparticle collision dynamics (MPCD) method. A recently developed nematic MPCD method [Phys. Rev. E 99, 063319 (2019)] which employs a tensor order parameter to describe the spatial and temporal variations of the nematic order is used to simulate the suspending anisotropic fluid. Considering both nematodynamic effects (anisotropic viscosity and elasticity) and thermal fluctuations, in the present study, we couple the nematic MPCD algorithm with a molecular dynamics (MD) scheme for the squirmer. A unique feature of the proposed method is that the nematic order, the fluid, and the squirmer are all represented in a particle-based framework. To test the applicability of this nematic MPCD-MD method, we simulate the dynamics of a spherical squirmer with homeotropic surface anchoring conditions in a bulk domain. The importance of anisotropic viscosity and elasticity on the squirmer’s speed and orientation is studied for different values of self-propulsion strength and squirmer type (pusher, puller or neutral). In sharp contrast to Newtonian fluids, the speed of the squirmer in a nematic fluid depends on the squirmer type. Interestingly, the speed of a strong pusher is smaller in the nematic fluid than for the Newtonian case. The orientational dynamics of the squirmer in the nematic fluid also shows a non-trivial dependence on the squirmer type. Our results compare well with existing experimental and numerical data. The full particle-based framework could be easily extended to model the dynamics of multiple squirmers in anisotropic fluids.Graphic abstract

Highlights

  • Microswimmers are natural or artificial self-driven entities which are capable of converting stored or ambient energy into a systematic motion in a suspending fluid medium [1]

  • In the following we provide a detail description of the nematic multiparticle collision dynamics (MPCD)-molecular dynamics (MD) algorithm which we use to study the dynamics of a squirmer moving in a nematic liquid crystals (LCs) medium

  • We apply the above-mentioned nematic MPCD-MD method to study the dynamics of a single squirmer in a bulk fluid with periodic boundary conditions in all dimensions

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Summary

Introduction

Microswimmers are natural or artificial self-driven entities which are capable of converting stored or ambient energy into a systematic motion in a suspending fluid medium [1]. The motion of elongated bacteria parallel to the nematic director can be explained by the minimization of elastic energy of the medium around a rodlike body. The analytical calculation showed that the reorientation dynamics of a spherical squirmer is governed by a nematodynamic toque associate with the squirmer’s flow field and anisotropic viscosity of the suspending medium [16,17,18]. This unique behaviour of the microswimmers was utilized to trans-

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