Microbial transport and dispersion in heterogeneous flows created by pillar arrays
Kejie Chen, Kairong Qin

TL;DR
This study models microbial transport in structured pillar arrays, revealing how geometry and flow influence microbial movement, accumulation, and dispersion, with implications for understanding microbial behavior in complex environments.
Contribution
Developed a Langevin simulation model to analyze microbial transport in heterogeneous pillar arrays, highlighting the effects of structure and flow on microbial trajectories and distribution.
Findings
Pillar surfaces induce local shear, redirecting microbes.
Microbes transiently accumulate near pillars due to looping trajectories.
Asymmetric pillar arrangements guide microbial movement perpendicular to flow.
Abstract
Swimming microbes, such as bacteria and algae, live in diverse habitats including soil, ocean and human body which are characterized by structural boundaries and heterogeneous fluid flows. Although much progress has been made in understanding the Brownian ratchet motions of microbes and their hydrodynamic interactions with the wall over the last decades, the complex interplay between the structural and fluidic environment and the self-propelling microbial motions still remains elusive. Here, we developed a Langevin model to simulate and investigate the transport and dispersion of microbes in periodic pillar arrays. By tracing the spatial-temporal evolution of microbial trajectories, we show that the no-slip pillar surface induces local fluid shear which redirects microbial movements. In the vicinity of pillars, looping trajectories and slowly moving speed lead to the transient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · stochastic dynamics and bifurcation
