Abstract
The motility mechanism of prokaryotic organisms has inspired many untethered microswimmers that could potentially perform minimally invasive medical procedures in stagnant fluid regions inside the human body. Some of these microswimmers are inspired by bacteria with single or multiple helical flagella to propel efficiently and fast. For multiple flagella configurations, the direct measurement of thrust and hydrodynamic propulsion efficiency has been challenging due to the ambiguous mechanical coupling between the flow field and mechanical power input. To address this challenge and to compare alternative micropropulsion designs, a methodology based on volumetric velocity field acquisition is developed to acquire the key propulsive performance parameters from scaled-up swimmer prototypes. A digital particle image velocimetry (PIV) analysis protocol was implemented and experiments were conducted with the aid of computational fluid dynamics (CFD). First, this methodology was validated using a rotating single-flagellum similitude model. In addition to the standard PIV error assessment, validation studies included 2D vs. 3D PIV, axial vs. lateral PIV and simultaneously acquired direct thrust force measurement comparisons. Compatible with typical micropropulsion flow regimes, experiments were conducted both for very low and higher Reynolds (Re) number regimes (up to a Re number = 0.01) than that are reported in the literature. Finally, multiple flagella bundling configurations at 0°, 90° and 180° helical phase-shift angles were studied using scaled-up multiple concentric flagella thrust elements. Thrust generation was found to be maximal for the in-phase (0°) bundling configuration but with ~50% lower hydrodynamic efficiency than the single flagellum. The proposed measurement protocol and static thrust test-bench can be used for bio-inspired microscale propulsion methods, where direct thrust and efficiency measurement are required.
Highlights
The vast biodiversity of swimming microorganisms [1,2], whose survival depends on fluidic propulsion, has inspired a wide range of synthetic microswimmers in the recent decade towards biomedical and environmental applications [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]
Prokaryotic microorganisms and bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, which have bidirectional molecular motors embedded in a cell membrane to generate rotational torque on their multiple flagella, have inspired many microswimmers with single or multiple helical flagella [17,18]
In order to understand the propulsive mechanics of a single flagellum vs. bundled multiple flagella, a volumetric velocity field reconstruction method based on a minimum of 2D digital particle image velocimetry (PIV) velocity components was used in this study
Summary
The vast biodiversity of swimming microorganisms [1,2], whose survival depends on fluidic propulsion, has inspired a wide range of synthetic microswimmers in the recent decade towards biomedical and environmental applications [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. Based on the linearity of the Stokes equations, Cortez et al introduced the method of regularized Stokeslets [20], which pioneered computational studies to explore helical flagella swimming [21,22,23] and flagellar bundling [24]. Along this line of research, Turner et al visualized the flagellar motion real-time using fluorescence techniques [25]. Comparison of computational results implementing the RFT method over thrust force measurements for a helical flagellum revealed qualitative and quantitative differences [23]
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