Dynamics of Mass Polar Spheroids During Sedimentation
Abstract
The dynamics of sedimenting particles under gravity are surprisingly complex due to the presence of effective long-ranged forces. When the particles are polar with a well-defined symmetry axis and non-uniform density, recent theoretical predictions suggest that prolate objects will repel and oblate ones will weakly attract. We tested these predictions using mass polar proalte spheroids, which are composed of 2 mm spheres glued together. We probed different aspect rations () and center of mass offsets () by combining spheres of different densities. Experiments were done in both quasi-two-dimensional (2D) and three=dimensional (3D) chambers. By optically tracking the motion of single particles, we found that the dynamics were well-described by a reduced mobility matrix model that could be solved analytically. Pairs of particles exhibited an effective repulsion, and their separation roughly scaled as ~(-1)/0.39, i.e. particles that were more prolate or had smaller mass asymmetry had stronger repulsion effects. In 3D, particles with >0 were distributed more uniformly than =0 particles, and the degree of uniformity increased with , indicating that the effective 2-body repulsion manifests for a large number of particles.
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