Abstract

The dynamics of biological capsules and red blood cells in shear flows has been studied extensively with experimental, analytical, and numerical methods. In particular, the effects of various parameters, including the shear rate or shear stress, membrane elasticity, capsule shape, and interior fluid viscosity, have been investigated carefully. The role of the membrane viscosity for capsule deformation dynamics has not been examined adequately. In previous studies, the so-called energy dissipation ratio has been used to account for the membrane viscosity effect by increasing the interior viscosity; however, the applicability and accuracy of this treatment have not been evaluated carefully. In this study, using the recently developed finite-difference scheme for immersed boundary simulations of viscoelastic membranes, we conduct comprehensive numerical simulations of the deformation processes of an originally spherical capsule in shear flows with various combinations of membrane and interior fluid viscosities. Our results show that the membrane and interior fluid viscosity have similar however different effects on the capsule deformation dynamics. While the capsule deformation decreases with both membrane and interior fluid viscosities, a typical decrease-then-increase variation is observed for the inclination angle as the membrane viscosity increases, instead of the monotonic decrease in the inclination angle with the interior fluid viscosity increase. Also, although both large membrane and interior fluid viscosity values can introduce oscillations in the capsule deformation and inclination, larger aptitudes and slow decay processes are noticed at larger membrane viscosities. The variations of other dynamic parameters of the capsule, including the circumference, average membrane velocity, and rotation frequency, are also analyzed, and an intuitive mechanism is proposed to relate the membrane velocity and rotation frequency to the capsule deformation and inclination angle. The simple mechanism is then applied to explain the spoon-like variation patterns for membrane velocity and rotation frequency observed in our results. Furthermore, we examine the validity of the energy dissipation ratio approach based on the mathematical functional dependence. Our results and analysis show that the dissipation ratio is a system and process dependent variable and it cannot be treated as a constant even for the same capsule. This research is valuable for a better understanding of the complex capsule dynamics in flows and also suggests that the membrane viscosity needs to be considered explicitly for accurate and reliable results in future studies.

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