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A regularised slender-body theory of non-uniform filaments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2020

B. J. Walker*
Affiliation:
Wolfson Centre for Mathematical Biology, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, OxfordOX2 6GG, UK
M. P. Curtis
Affiliation:
Wolfson Centre for Mathematical Biology, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, OxfordOX2 6GG, UK Hampton School, Hanworth Road, Hampton, MiddlesexTW12 3HD, UK
K. Ishimoto
Affiliation:
Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University, Kyoto606-8502, Japan
E. A. Gaffney
Affiliation:
Wolfson Centre for Mathematical Biology, Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, OxfordOX2 6GG, UK
*
Email address for correspondence: [email protected]

Abstract

Resolving the detailed hydrodynamics of a slender body immersed in highly viscous Newtonian fluid has been the subject of extensive research, applicable to a broad range of biological and physical scenarios. In this work, we expand upon classical theories developed over the past fifty years, deriving an algebraically accurate slender-body theory that may be applied to a wide variety of body shapes, ranging from biologically inspired tapering flagella to highly oscillatory body geometries with only weak constraints, most significantly requiring that cross-sections be circular. Inspired by well known analytic results for the flow around a prolate ellipsoid, we pose an ansatz for the velocity field in terms of a regular integral of regularised Stokes-flow singularities with prescribed, spatially varying regularisation parameters. A detailed asymptotic analysis is presented, seeking a uniformly valid expansion of the ansatz integral, accurate at leading algebraic order in the geometry aspect ratio, to enforce no-slip boundary conditions and thus analytically justify the slender-body theory developed in this framework. The regularisation within the ansatz additionally affords significant computational simplicity for the subsequent slender-body theory, with no specialised quadrature or numerical techniques required to evaluate the regular integral. Furthermore, in the special case of slender bodies with a straight centreline in uniform flow, we derive a slender-body theory that is particularly straightforward via use of the analytic solution for a prolate ellipsoid. We evidence the validity of our simple theory with explicit numerical examples for a wide variety of slender bodies, and highlight a potential robustness of our methodology beyond its rigorously justified scope.

Type
JFM Papers
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

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References

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