论文标题
泰勒的细长杆的分散体
Taylor dispersion of elongated rods
论文作者
论文摘要
在流体流中运输的颗粒,例如细胞,聚合物或纳米棒,很少是球形的。在这项研究中,我们从数值和理论上研究了最初局部的被动伸长的布朗颗粒的分散,这些颗粒在二维Poiseuille流动中被限制为一种旋转自由度,表明细长的颗粒表现出增强的纵向分散体。在剪切流中,由于旋转扩散及其经典的Jeffery的轨道,杆会由于对流,扩散和旋转而翻译。增强色散的大小取决于粒子的纵横比以及其剪切诱导的旋转对流和旋转扩散率的相对重要性。当旋转扩散占主导地位时,我们使用定向平均的平均翻译扩散率对杆的纵向扩散率恢复了经典的泰勒分散率。然而,在高剪切极限中,杆倾向于与流量保持一致,并由于其各向异性扩散而最终分散。我们的蒙特卡洛模拟颗粒分散体模拟的结果非常好,受到泰勒原始作品启发的简单理论。长时间和较大的小子数量,有效的一维运输方程是带有颗粒的纵向传输速度和分散系数的积分表达式的。增强的色散系数可以沿单个曲线折叠成高纵横比的颗粒,这代表了将泰勒的原始预测扩展到细长颗粒的简单校正因子。
Particles transported in fluid flows, such as cells, polymers, or nanorods, are rarely spherical. In this study, we numerically and theoretically investigate the dispersion of an initially localized patch of passive elongated Brownian particles constrained to one degree of rotational freedom in a two-dimensional Poiseuille flow, demonstrating that elongated particles exhibit an enhanced longitudinal dispersion. In a shear flow, the rods translate due to advection and diffusion and rotate due to rotational diffusion and their classical Jeffery's orbit. The magnitude of the enhanced dispersion depends on the particle's aspect ratio and the relative importance of its shear-induced rotational advection and rotational diffusivity. When rotational diffusion dominates, we recover the classical Taylor dispersion result for the longitudinal spreading rate using an orientationally averaged translational diffusivity for the rods. However, in the high-shear limit, the rods tend to align with the flow and ultimately disperse more due to their anisotropic diffusivities. Results from our Monte Carlo simulations of the particle dispersion are captured remarkably well by a simple theory inspired by Taylor's original work. For long times and large Peclet numbers, an effective one-dimensional transport equation is derived with integral expressions for the particles' longitudinal transport speed and dispersion coefficient. The enhanced dispersion coefficient can be collapsed along a single curve for particles of high aspect ratio, representing a simple correction factor that extends Taylor's original prediction to elongated particles.