Induced Diffusion of Tracers in a Bacterial Suspension: Theory and Experiments
G. L. Mi\~no, J. Dunstan, A. Rousselet, E. Clement, R. Soto

TL;DR
This paper combines theory and experiments to analyze how bacterial swimming influences tracer diffusion, revealing that surface proximity and swimmer efficiency significantly affect diffusion rates.
Contribution
It introduces a kinetic theory model linking swimmer-tracer interactions to diffusion and validates it with experiments on E. coli near surfaces.
Findings
Diffusion coefficient proportional to bacterial concentration and velocity.
Surface proximity increases induced diffusion by up to four times.
Theoretical predictions align qualitatively with experimental results.
Abstract
The induced diffusion of tracers in a bacterial suspension is studied theoretically and experimentally at low bacterial concentrations. Considering the swimmer-tracer hydrodynamic interactions at low-Reynolds number and using a kinetic theory approach, it is shown that the induced diffusion coefficient is proportional to the swimmer concentration, their mean velocity and a coefficient , as observed experimentally. The coefficient scales as the tracer-swimmer cross section times the mean square displacement produced by single scatterings. The displacements depend on the swimmer propulsion forces. Considering simple swimmer models (acting on the fluid as two monopoles or as a force dipole) it is shown that increases for decreasing swimming efficiencies. Close to solid surfaces the swimming efficiency degrades and, consequently, the induced diffusion increase.…
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