Using Phase Field Models to Simulate Colloidal Chemohydrodynamics in Bulk and at Phase Boundaries
ORAL
Abstract
Colloidal particles can migrate in a solution in response to a solute concentration field, a phenomenon known as diffusiophoresis. Chemically active colloids can modify the concentration field of its surrounding, thus harvesting energy from the environment to self-propel or to change the trajectory of neighboring colloids. To date, the most efficient methods to simulate these active systems rely on Green's functions of the Laplace and Stokes operators that are only valid in the steady and dilute limits. However, many active systems of interest display interesting feedback behavior in dense and unsteady systems. We have recently developed a method using phase field models that performs full chemohydrodynamics simulations of such dense and unsteady systems and incorporates colloidal particles as highly viscous fluid phases. We domonstrate the feasability of this by simulating particles in both homogenous and herterogenous fluidic environments and compare to known theoretical results. We also demonstrate the ability of the method to simulate self-diffusiophoresis by adding asymmetric chemical reactions to colloidal systems.
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Publication: Zhu, Q.; Alhasan, R.; Banks, D. S.; Tree, D. R. Modeling Surface Tension Driven Phenomena in Colloidal Particle Systems using Fluid Particle Dynamics. In preparation
Presenters
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Dakota S Banks
Brigham Young University
Authors
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Dakota S Banks
Brigham Young University
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Qinyu Zhu
BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY, Brigham Young University
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Rami Alhasan
Brigham Young University
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Douglas R Tree
Brigham Young University