Moving charged particles in lattice Boltzmann-based electrokinetics

  • Michael Kuron
  • , Georg Rempfer
  • , Florian Schornbaum
  • , Martin Bauer
  • , Christian Godenschwager
  • , Christian Holm
  • , Joost De Graaf

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The motion of ionic solutes and charged particles under the influence of an electric field and the ensuing hydrodynamic flow of the underlying solvent is ubiquitous in aqueous colloidal suspensions. The physics of such systems is described by a coupled set of differential equations, along with boundary conditions, collectively referred to as the electrokinetic equations. Capuani et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 121, 973 (2004)] introduced a lattice-based method for solving this system of equations, which builds upon the lattice Boltzmann algorithm for the simulation of hydrodynamic flow and exploits computational locality. However, thus far, a description of how to incorporate moving boundary conditions into the Capuani scheme has been lacking. Moving boundary conditions are needed to simulate multiple arbitrarily moving colloids. In this paper, we detail how to introduce such a particle coupling scheme, based on an analogue to the moving boundary method for the pure lattice Boltzmann solver. The key ingredients in our method are mass and charge conservation for the solute species and a partial-volume smoothing of the solute fluxes to minimize discretization artifacts. We demonstrate our algorithm’s effectiveness by simulating the electrophoresis of charged spheres in an external field; for a single sphere we compare to the equivalent electro-osmotic (co-moving) problem. Our method’s efficiency and ease of implementation should prove beneficial to future simulations of the dynamics in a wide range of complex nanoscopic and colloidal systems that were previously inaccessible to lattice-based continuum algorithms.

Original languageEnglish
Article number214102
JournalJournal of Chemical Physics
Volume145
Issue number21
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Dec 2016

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
M.K., G.R., J.d.G., and C.H. thank the DFG for funding through the SPP 1726 ?Microswimmers - From Single Particle Motion to Collective Behavior.? G.R. and C.H. acknowledge further funding through SFB716, TP C.5. J.d.G. gratefully acknowledges financial support by an NWO Rubicon Grant (No. 680501210) and funding by a Marie Sk?odowska-Curie Intra European Fellowship (G.A. No. 654916) within Horizon 2020. We thank G. Davies and J. Harting for useful discussions.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Author(s).

Funding

M.K., G.R., J.d.G., and C.H. thank the DFG for funding through the SPP 1726 ?Microswimmers - From Single Particle Motion to Collective Behavior.? G.R. and C.H. acknowledge further funding through SFB716, TP C.5. J.d.G. gratefully acknowledges financial support by an NWO Rubicon Grant (No. 680501210) and funding by a Marie Sk?odowska-Curie Intra European Fellowship (G.A. No. 654916) within Horizon 2020. We thank G. Davies and J. Harting for useful discussions.

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Moving charged particles in lattice Boltzmann-based electrokinetics'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this