Abstract:
In the Stokesian limit, the streamline topology around a single neutrally buoyant sphere is identical to
the topology of pair-sphere pathlines, both in an ambient simple shear flow. In both cases there are
fore-aft symmetric open and closed trajectories spatially demarcated by an axisymmetric separatrix
surface. This topology has crucial implications for both scalar transport from a single sphere, and for
the rheology of a dilute suspension of spheres. The first part of the thesis examines the topology of the
fluid pathlines around a neutrally buoyant freely rotating spheroid in simple shear flow, and shows it
to be profoundly different from that for a sphere. This will have a crucial bearing on transport from
such particles in shearing flows. To the extent that fluid pathlines in the single-spheroid problem and
pair-trajectories in the two-spheroid problem, are expected to bear a qualitative resemblance to each
other, the non-trivial trajectory topology identified here will also have significant consequences for the
rheology of dilute suspensions of anisotropic particles.
An inertialess non-Brownian spheroid in a simple shear flow rotates indefinitely in any one of a
one-parameter family of Jeffery orbits. The parameter is the orbit constant C, with C = 0 and C = ∞
denoting the limiting cases of a spinning(log-rolling) spheroid, and a spheroid tumbling in the flowgradient
plane, respectively. The streamline pattern around a spinning spheroid is qualitatively identical
to that around a sphere regardless of its aspect ratio. For a spheroid in any orbit other than the spinning
one (C > 0), the velocity field being time dependent in all such cases, the fluid pathlines may be divided
into two categories. Pathlines in the first category extend from upstream to downstream infinity without
ever crossing the flow axis; unlike the spinning case, these pathlines are fore-aft asymmetric, suffering a
net displacement in both the gradient and vorticity directions. The second category includes primarily
those pathlines that loop around the spheroid, and to a lesser extent those that cross the flow axis,
without looping around the spheroid, reversing direction in the process. The residence time, in the
neighbourhood of the spheroid, is a smooth function of upstream conditions for pathlines belonging to
the first category. In sharp contrast, the number of loops, and thence the residence time associated
with the pathlines in the second category, is extremely sensitive to upstream conditions. Plots of the
residence time as a function of the upstream co-ordinates of these pathlines reveal a fractal structure
with singularities distributed on a Cantor-like set, suggesting the existence of a chaotic saddle in the
vicinity of the spheroid.
After establishing the pathline topology for simple shear, the first part ends with the implications
of the findings for transport in disperse multiphase systems. There is also a brief description of the
pathline topology for a neutrally buoyant spheroid in the more general one-parameter family of planar
hyperbolic linear flows.