Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemical Engineering University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara California
Abstract
AbstractWe study the transport phenomena of colloidal particles embedded within a moving array of obstacles that mimics a dynamic, time‐varying porous material. While colloidal transport in an array of stationary obstacles (“passive” porous media) has been well studied, we lack the fundamental understanding of colloidal diffusion in a nonequilibrium porous environment. We combine Taylor dispersion theory, Brownian dynamics simulations, and optical tweezer experiments to study the transport of tracer colloidal particles in an oscillating lattice of obstacles. We discover that the dispersion of tracer particles is a nonmonotonic function of oscillation frequency and exhibits a maximum that exceeds the Stokes–Einstein–Sutherland diffusivity in the absence of obstacles. By solving the Smoluchowski equation using a generalized dispersion framework, we demonstrate that the enhanced transport of the tracers depends critically on both the direct interparticle interactions with the obstacles and the fluid‐mediated, hydrodynamic interactions generated by the moving obstacles.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
National Science Foundation
Air Force Office of Scientific Research
American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund
Subject
General Chemical Engineering,Environmental Engineering,Biotechnology