Faxén's law

In fluid dynamics, Faxén's laws relate a sphere's velocity and angular velocity to the forces, torque, stresslet and flow it experiences under low Reynolds number (creeping flow) conditions.

First law

Faxen's first law was introduced in 1922 by Swedish physicist Hilding Faxén, who at the time was active at Uppsala University, and is given by[1][2]

where

It can also be written in the form

where is the mobility.

In the case that the pressure gradient is small compared with the length scale of the sphere's diameter, and when there is no external force, the last two terms of this form may be neglected. In this case the external fluid flow simply advects the sphere.

Second law

Faxen's second law is given by[1][2]

where

'Third law'

Batchelor and Green[3] derived an equation for the stresslet, given by[1][2]

where

Note there is no rate of strain on the sphere (no ) since the spheres are assumed to be rigid.

Faxén's law is a correction to Stokes' law for the friction on spherical objects in a viscous fluid, valid where the object moves close to a wall of the container.[4]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Chen, Shing Bor; Ye, Xiangnan (2000). "Faxen's laws of a composite sphere under creeping flow conditions". Journal of colloid and interface science. 221 (1): 50–57. doi:10.1006/jcis.1999.6552.
  2. 1 2 3 Durlofsky, Louis, John F. Brady, and Georges Bossis. "Dynamic simulation of hydrodynamically interacting particles." Journal of fluid mechanics 180.1 (1987): 21-49 doi:10.1017/S002211208700171X, equations (2.15a, b, c). Note sign change.
  3. Batchelor, G. K.; Green, J. T. (1972). "The hydrodynamic interaction of two small freely-moving spheres in a linear flow field". J. Fluid Mech. 56 (2): 375–400. Bibcode:1972JFM....56..401B. doi:10.1017/S0022112072002435.
  4. Single molecule measurements and biological motors - Glossary, accessed on May 12, 2009

References

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