The squirmer is a model for a spherical microswimmer swimming in Stokes flow.
The squirmer model was introduced by James Lighthill in 1952 and refined and used to model Paramecium by John Blake in 1971.
[1] [2] Blake used the squirmer model to describe the flow generated by a carpet of beating short filaments called cilia on the surface of Paramecium.
Today, the squirmer is a standard model for the study of self-propelled particles, such as Janus particles, in Stokes flow.
[3] Here we give the flow field of a squirmer in the case of a non-deformable axisymmetric spherical squirmer (radius
[1][2] These expressions are given in a spherical coordinate system.
( cos θ ) +
are constant coefficients,
are Legendre polynomials, and
sin 2 θ , …
The expressions above are in the frame of the moving particle.
At the interface one finds
By using the Lorentz Reciprocal Theorem, one finds the velocity vector of the particle
The flow in a fixed lab frame is given by
with swimming speed
The series above are often truncated at
in the study of far field flow,
sin θ +
sin 2 θ
, with squirmer parameter
characterizes a hydrodynamic source dipole with decay
(and with that the swimming speed
corresponds to a hydrodynamic stresslet or force dipole with decay
gives the ratio of both contributions and the direction of the force dipole.
is used to categorize microswimmers into pushers, pullers and neutral swimmers.
[5] The above figures show the velocity field in the lab frame and in the particle-fixed frame.
The hydrodynamic dipole and quadrupole fields of the squirmer model result from surface stresses, due to beating cilia on bacteria, or chemical reactions or thermal non-equilibrium on Janus particles.
The squirmer is force-free.
On the contrary, the velocity field of the passive particle results from an external force, its far-field corresponds to a "stokeslet" or hydrodynamic monopole.
A force-free passive particle doesn't move and doesn't create any flow field.