Effect of motility on the transport of bacteria populations through a porous medium
Adama Creppy, Eric Cl\'ement, Carine Douarche, Maria Veronica, D'Angelo, Harold Auradou

TL;DR
This study investigates how bacterial motility influences their transport in porous media, revealing that motile bacteria exhibit delayed dispersion, distinct distribution shapes, and enhanced exploration mechanisms compared to non-motile bacteria.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed microscopic analysis showing how motility causes active retention and faster transport along fast-tracks, affecting large-scale microbial transfer.
Findings
Motile bacteria show a systematic retardation compared to non-motile bacteria.
Distribution of motile bacteria is skewed and resembles a Gamma distribution.
Motility induces active retention and enhances exploration along fast-tracks.
Abstract
The role of activity on the hydrodynamic dispersion of bacteria in a model porous medium is studied by tracking thousands of bacteria in a microfluidic chip containing randomly placed pillars. We first evaluate the spreading dynamics of two populations of motile and non-motile bacteria injected at different flow rates. In both cases, we observe that the mean and the variance of the distances covered by the bacteria vary linearly with time and flow velocity, a result qualitatively consistent with the standard geometric dispersion picture. However, quantitatively, the motiles bacteria display a systematic retardation effect when compared to the non-motile ones. Furthermore, the shape of the traveled distance distribution in the flow direction differs significantly for both the motile and the non-motile strain, hence probing a markedly different exploration process. For the non-motile…
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