Sheared bioconvection in a horizontal tube
O. A. Croze, E. E. Ashraf, M. A. Bees

TL;DR
This study investigates how imposed fluid flow influences bioconvection patterns and cell transport in suspensions of green algae within horizontal tubes, revealing complex pattern transitions and partial suppression of bioconvection.
Contribution
First experimental analysis of bioconvection in algae under flow in horizontal tubes, detailing pattern changes and flow interactions at various flow rates.
Findings
Pattern wavelength increases with flow rate.
High flow causes plume fragmentation into inclined linear plumes.
Bioconvection persists even at high flow rates, affecting flow profiles.
Abstract
The recent interest in using microorganisms for biofuels is motivation enough to study bioconvection and cell dispersion in tubes subject to imposed flow. To optimize light and nutrient uptake, many microorganisms swim in directions biased by environmental cues (e.g. phototaxis in algae and chemotaxis in bacteria). Such taxes inevitably lead to accumulations of cells, which, as many microorganisms have a density different to the fluid, can induce hydrodynamic instabilites. The large-scale fluid flow and spectacular patterns that arise are termed bioconvection. However, the extent to which bioconvection is affected or suppressed by an imposed fluid flow, and how bioconvection influences the mean flow profile and cell transport are open questions. This experimental study is the first to address these issues by quantifying the patterns due to suspensions of the gravitactic and gyrotactic…
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