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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(24): e2318917121, 2024 Jun 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38843185

RESUMEN

Among many unexpected phenomena of active matter is the recently observed superfluid-like thinning (viscosity drop) behavior of bacteria suspensions. Understanding this peculiar self-propelled thinning by active matter is of theoretical and practical importance. Here, we find that, although distinct in driving mechanisms, active matter and shear flows exhibit similar thinning behaviors upon the increase of self-propulsion and shear forces, respectively. Our structural characterizations reveal that they actually share the same cluster-breaking mechanism of thinning. How fast and how shattered the cluster is broken determines the (dis)continuity of the thinning. This explains why adding active particles to Newtonian fluids can cause thinning, in which rotation of active particles play a key role in breaking clusters. Our work proposes a mechanism of self-propelled thinning and further establishes the underlying connections between active matter and shear flows.

2.
Soft Matter ; 16(15): 3642-3648, 2020 Apr 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32219271

RESUMEN

Different from previous modeling of self-propelled particles, we develop a method to propel particles with a constant average velocity instead of a constant force. This constant propulsion velocity (CPV) approach is validated by its agreement with the conventional constant propulsion force (CPF) approach in the flowing regime. However, the CPV approach shows its advantage of accessing quasistatic flows of yield stress fluids with a vanishing propulsion velocity, while the CPF approach is usually unable to because of finite system size. Taking this advantage, we realize cyclic self-propulsion and study the evolution of the propulsion force with the propelled particle displacement, both in the quasistatic flow regime. By mapping the shear stress and shear rate to the propulsion force and propulsion velocity, we find similar rheological behaviors of self-propelled systems to sheared systems, including the yield force gap between the CPF and CPV approaches, propulsion force overshoot, reversible-irreversible transition under cyclic propulsion, and propulsion bands in plastic flows. These similarities suggest underlying connections between self-propulsion and shear, although they act on systems in different ways.

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