Far-field approximations for multi-timescale microswimmers near a boundary

Abstract

Hydrodynamic interactions with boundaries can significantly affect the trajectories of microscale swimmers. In simple swimmer models, a common assumption is that swimmer shape remains constant, essentially averaging over the rapid oscillations in geometry and associated fluid flows that often are the source of propulsion. Previous work in minimal force-dipole models has shown how the inclusion of time-dependent swimmer changes can lead to a fundamentally wider class of behaviours than for their classic (implicitly averaged) counterparts. However, since force dipole models correspond to the leading-order term in the far-field description of the swimmer-induced flow, they break down as the swimmer approaches a boundary and predictions can become qualitatively inaccurate. Here, we extend the minimal force-dipole model by incorporating higher order flow singularities, systematically accounting for rapid oscillations in shape and singularity strength through a multiscale analysis. We demonstrate that the inclusion of time-dependence into these higher order models significantly expands the reachable parameter space, in particular by increasing its dimensionality. In these extended dynamics, we observe three distinct behaviours: crashing, escaping and hovering. Notably, hovering states are absent from the dynamics predicted by the simplest models, but are observed in more complex models.

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