Publications by authors named "Prateek Dwivedi"

Self-propelled droplets serve as ideal model systems to delve deeper into understanding the motion of biological microswimmers by simulating their motility. Biological microorganisms are renowned for showcasing a diverse array of dynamic swimming behaviors when confronted with physical constraints. This study aims to elucidate the impact of physical constraints on swimming characteristics of biological microorganisms.

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Background: Lack of eyecare protective measures especially in unconscious and sedated critically ill patients, make them prone to ocular surface diseases (OSDs), e.g., exposure keratopathy.

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Typical bodily and environmental fluids encountered by biological swimmers consist of dissolved macromolecules such as proteins or polymers, rendering them even non-Newtonian at times. Active droplets mimic the essential propulsive characteristics of several biological swimmers, and serve as ideal model systems to widen our understanding of their locomotive strategies. Here, we investigate the motion of a micellar solubilization driven active oil droplet in an aqueous medium consisting of polymers as macromolecular solutes.

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The motion of biological swimmers in typical bodily fluids is modelled using a system of micellar solubilization driven active droplets in a viscoelastic polymeric solution. The viscoelastic nature of the medium, as perceived by the moving droplet, characterized by the Deborah number (De), is tuned by varying the surfactant (fuel) and polymer concentration in the ambient medium. At moderate De, the droplet exhibits a steady deformed shape, markedly different from the spherical shape observed in Newtonian media.

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Understanding the motion of artificial active swimmers in complex surroundings, such as a dense bath of passive particulate matter, is essential for their successful utilization as cargo (drug) carriers and sensors or for medical imaging, under microscopic domains. In this study, we experimentally investigated the motion of active SiO-Pt Janus particles (JPs) in a two-dimensional bath of smaller silica tracers dispersed with varying areal densities. Our observations indicate that when an active JP undergoes a collision with an isolated tracer, their interaction can have a significant impact on the swimmer's motion.

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