The correction of buoyancy effects is tackled for particles moving close to a singular corner in creeping flow conditions.A few density-mismatched particle trajectories are used to reconstruct the dynamics of a neutra...The correction of buoyancy effects is tackled for particles moving close to a singular corner in creeping flow conditions.A few density-mismatched particle trajectories are used to reconstruct the dynamics of a neutrally-buoyant particle all over the target domain.We propose to take advantage of the dissipative dynamics of density-mismatched particles in order to probe the target domain.Thereafter,we retrieve the neutrally-buoyant particle flow all over the domain by reconstructing the phase space of the density-mismatched particulate flow and taking the limit of the particle-to-fluid density ratio tending to one.The robustness of such an approach is demonstrated by deliberately ill-conditioning the reconstruction operator.In fact,we show that our algorithm well performs even when we rely on qualitatively-different density-mismatched orbit topologies or on bundles of close trajectories rather than homogeneously distributed orbits.Potential applications to microfluidics and improvements of the proposed algorithm are finally discussed.展开更多
文摘The correction of buoyancy effects is tackled for particles moving close to a singular corner in creeping flow conditions.A few density-mismatched particle trajectories are used to reconstruct the dynamics of a neutrally-buoyant particle all over the target domain.We propose to take advantage of the dissipative dynamics of density-mismatched particles in order to probe the target domain.Thereafter,we retrieve the neutrally-buoyant particle flow all over the domain by reconstructing the phase space of the density-mismatched particulate flow and taking the limit of the particle-to-fluid density ratio tending to one.The robustness of such an approach is demonstrated by deliberately ill-conditioning the reconstruction operator.In fact,we show that our algorithm well performs even when we rely on qualitatively-different density-mismatched orbit topologies or on bundles of close trajectories rather than homogeneously distributed orbits.Potential applications to microfluidics and improvements of the proposed algorithm are finally discussed.