Dynamics of swimming bacteria at complex interfaces
Diego Lopez, Eric Lauga

TL;DR
This paper models how complex interfaces influence the swimming behavior of bacteria, revealing that surface properties can alter their circular motion direction and orientation, with implications for controlling bacterial movement.
Contribution
The study introduces a hydrodynamic model predicting bacterial swimming kinematics near various complex interfaces, highlighting the role of boundary conditions and bacteria shape in motion direction.
Findings
Surface properties reorient bacteria parallel to interfaces.
Circular motion direction depends on interface conditions.
Hydrodynamics can be used to control bacterial movement.
Abstract
Flagellated bacteria exploiting helical propulsion are known to swim along circular trajectories near surfaces. Fluid dynamics predicts this circular motion to be clockwise (CW) above a rigid surface (when viewed from inside the fluid) and counter-clockwise (CCW) below a free surface. Recent experimental investigations showed that complex physicochemical processes at the nearby surface could lead to a change in the direction of rotation, both at solid surfaces absorbing slip-inducing polymers and interfaces covered with surfactants. Motivated by these results, we use a far-field hydrodynamic model to predict the kinematics of swimming near three types of interfaces: clean fluid-fluid interface, slipping rigid wall, and a fluid interface covered by incompressible surfactants. Representing the helical swimmer by a superposition of hydrodynamic singularities, we first show that in all…
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