Hydrodynamics of confined active fluids
Abstract
We theoretically describe the dynamics of swimmer populations confined in thin liquid films. We first demonstrate that hydrodynamic interactions between confined swimmers only depend on their shape and are independent of their specific swimming mechanism. We also show that due to friction with the walls, confined swimmers do not reorient due to flow gradients but the flow field itself. We then quantify the consequences of these microscopic interaction rules on the large-scale hydrodynamics of isotropic populations. We investigate in details their stability and the resulting phase behavior, highlighting the differences with conventional active, three-dimensional suspensions. Two classes of polar swimmers are distinguished depending on their geometrical polarity. The first class gives rise to coherent directed motion at all scales whereas for the second class we predict the spontaneous formation of coherent clusters (swarms).
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