Hydrodynamic attraction of bacteria to gas and liquid interfaces

ORAL

Abstract

Motile microorganisms often encounter solid and fluid boundaries. Understanding the underlying physics of their accumulation near these boundaries can impact a wide range of applications from biofilm formation to micro-robot design. We combine experiments and numerical simulations to investigate bacteria (Escherichia coli) attractions to various fluid-fluid interfaces. We show that the strongest cell accumulation occurs near the lowest viscosity ratio (gas interfaces). We develop a new theory based on Brownian dynamics including hydrodynamics and short-range physio-chemical interactions between bacteria and surfactant-laden interfaces and explain our experimental findings. We include higher order singularities in our hydrodynamic model and study their effects on bacterial orientations, trajectories, and accumulation.

*This work is partially supported by grants from the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative and the National Science Foundation CBET- 1604423.

Presenters

  • Adib Ahmadzadegan

    • Purdue Univ

Authors

  • Adib Ahmadzadegan

    • Purdue Univ
  • Shiyan WANG

    • Purdue Univ
  • Pavlos P Vlachos

    • Purdue Univ
  • Arezoo M Ardekani

    • Purdue Univ