Rheological response and direct visualization of collective patterns formation leading to shear-bands formation in a suspension of active E.coli at the super-fluidity transition

ORAL

Abstract

Suspensions of motile Escherichia coli were found to display `negative viscosity increment' at low shear rate viz., adding such bacteria lowers the shear viscosity of the system (H.M.Lopez , J. Gachelin, C. Douarche, H.Auradou, E. Clément, Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 028301 (2015)). Furthermore at higher concentrations a regime of zero viscosity, akin to a "superfluidity" transition, can be reached. Here, for a strain of very active bacteria, we report a full exploration of the rheological response changing confinement, shear rate and concentration, both in a low-shear Couette rheometer and in a cone-plane rheometer. The last allows a direct visualization of the collective organization under shear and the exploration of the different regimes leading the “superfluidity transition” in relation with the dynamics of shear-band formation.

*This work was supported by the ANR grant ``BacFlow'' ANR-15-CE30-0013, PRC 1576 (CNRS-Roy.Society) and ESMI project E150200679 .

Presenters

  • Eric Clement

    • PMMH, ESPCI
    • PMMH Laboratory - ESPCI Paris

Authors

  • Eric Clement

    • PMMH, ESPCI
    • PMMH Laboratory - ESPCI Paris
  • Vincent M Martinez

    • ICMCS, University of Edinburgh
  • Jochen Arlt

    • ICMCS, University of Edinburgh
  • Carine Douarche

    • FAST, University of Paris-Sud
    • Laboratoire de Physique des Solides - Universite Paris-Sud
  • Adama CREPPY

    • FAST, University of Paris-Sud
  • Harold Auradou

    • FAST, University of Paris-Sud
    • Université Paris-Saclay
  • Angela Dawson

    • ICMCS, University of Edinburgh
  • Jana Schwarz-Linek

    • ICMCS, University of Edinburgh
  • Wilson Poon

    • ICMCS, University of Edinburgh