Mangrove vegetation provides natural protection against coastal hazards like flooding and erosion. In spite of their economic and societal value, mangrove forests have experienced a worldwide decline due to human activities. Bamboo structures, formed by poles driven into the soil, are being used to create a sheltered environment for mangrove restoration. The lack of design rules for the structures has led to mixed success rates in their implementation. Improving future designs requires a better understanding of how the bamboo poles affect waves and currents. Currents cause drag forces on the poles, which depend on flow acceleration through the elements (blockage), and the distance from wakes of upstream cylinders (sheltering). We developed a model that predicts the bulk drag coefficient of dense arrays of emergent cylinders in a current, including blockage, sheltering and a balance between turbulence production and dissipation. The model could reproduce measured bulk drag coefficients from the literature within a deviation of 20%. The model also showed that anisotropic structures with small spanwise spacing and large streamwise separation maximize the bulk drag coefficient, and the energy dissipation per pole. The application of the model can guide the design of future mangrove restoration efforts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83035-0 | DOI Listing |
Soft Matter
January 2025
James Franck Institute and Department of Physics, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
We measure the response of open-cell polyurethane foams filled with a dense suspension of fumed silica particles in polyethylene glycol at compression speeds spanning several orders of magnitude. The gradual compressive stress increase of the composite material indicates the existence of shear rate gradients in the interstitial suspension caused by wide distributions in pore sizes in the disordered foam network. The energy dissipated during compression scales with an effective internal shear rate, allowing for the collapse of three data sets for different pore-size foams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
January 2025
Department of Materials, ETH Zürich, Zürich 8093, Switzerland.
The surface tension of partially wetting droplets deforms soft substrates. These deformations are usually localized to a narrow region near the contact line, forming a so-called 'elastocapillary ridge.' When a droplet slides along a substrate, the movement of the elastocapillary ridge dissipates energy in the substrate and slows the droplet down.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
October 2024
Mechanical Engineering Department, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA.
This work proposes an analytical model considering the effects of hydrodynamic drag and kinetic barriers induced by liquid solvation forces to predict the translational diffusivity of a nanoparticle on an adsorbing surface. Small nanoparticles physically adsorbed to a well-wetted surface can retain significant in-plane mobility through thermally activated stick-slip motion, which can result in surface diffusivities comparable to the bulk diffusivity due to free-space Brownian motion. Theoretical analysis and molecular dynamics simulations in this work show that the surface diffusivity is enhanced when (i) the Hamaker constant is smaller than a critical value prescribed by the interfacial surface energy and particle dimensions, and (ii) the nanoparticle is adsorbed at specific metastable separations of molecular dimensions away from the wall.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
October 2024
Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1PZ, United Kingdom.
In floating catalyst chemical vapor deposition (FCCVD), high-aspect-ratio carbon nanotubes (CNTs) are produced in the gas phase at high number concentrations and undergo collision and agglomeration, eventually giving rise to a macroscale aerogel, enabling functional material forms such as fibers or mats to be obtained directly from the synthesis process. The self-assembly behavior between high-aspect-ratio CNTs dictates the resulting morphology at the nanoscale and subsequently the bulk properties of the CNT product. Reorientation between CNTs after collision is a critical step that results in bundle formation and precedes aerogel formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Biol
September 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Birla Institute of Technology and Science-Pilani, K K Birla Goa Campus, Zuarinagar, Sancoale, Goa, 403726, India.
Rheotaxis is a fundamental mechanism of sperm cells that guides them in navigating towards the oocyte. The present study investigates the phenomenon of sperm rheotaxis in Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluid media, which for the first time explores a viscosity range equivalent to that of the oviductal fluid of the female reproductive tract in rectilinear microfluidic channels. Three parameters, the progressive velocity while performing rheotaxis, the radius of rotation during rheotaxis, and the percentage of rheotactic sperm cells in the bulk and near-wall regions of the microfluidic channel were measured.
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