Dynamics of the Chemotactic Boycott Effect

ORAL

Abstract

Aerobic bacteria often live in thin fluid layers on irregular surfaces, near solid-air-water contact lines where the interplay between fluid interface geometry, nutrient transport, and chemotaxis is central to the micro-ecology. To elucidate these processes, we use the simplified geometry of a sessile drop and provide direct experimental evidence for the ``chemotactic Boycott effect" in suspensions of {\it B. subtilis}: upward oxygentaxis toward the drop surface leads to accumulation of cells in a thin layer, which flows down to the contact line and produces there a persistent vortex which traps cells near the meniscus. These phenomena are explained quantitatively with a mathematical model consisting of coupled oxygen diffusion and consumption, chemotaxis, and viscous fluid dynamics; they are shown to be associated with a singularity in the chemotactic dynamics at the contact line.

Authors

  • Luis Cisneros

  • Chris Dombrowski

  • John O. Kessler

    • Department of Physics, University of Arizona
  • Raymond Goldstein

    • University of Arizona
  • Charles Wolgemuth

    • Uconn Health Center
    • UCONN Health Center
    • University of Connecticut Health Center
  • Idan Tuval

    • UIB, Palma de Mallorca, Spain