Self-transport of swimming bacteria is impaired by porous microstructure
Amin Dehkharghani, Nicolas Waisbord, and Jeffrey S. Guasto

TL;DR
This study investigates how the microstructure of porous environments affects the self-transport of swimming bacteria, revealing that porosity and geometry primarily regulate their large-scale movement.
Contribution
The paper introduces a theoretical model predicting bacterial transport in porous media based on microstructure, linking geometry to motility and diffusion.
Findings
Transport is governed by scattering and persistent swimming cutoff.
Porosity and scale of microstructure control effective diffusion.
A universal model predicts bacterial movement across geometries.
Abstract
Motility is a fundamental survival strategy of bacteria to navigate porous environments. Swimming cells thrive in quiescent wetlands and sediments at the bottom of the marine water column, where they mediate many essential biogeochemical processes. While swimming motility in bulk fluid is now well established, a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms regulating self-transport in the confined interstices of porous media is lacking, and determining the interactions between cells and surfaces of the solid matrix becomes paramount. Here, we precisely track the movement of bacteria (\emph{Magnetococcus marinus}) through a series of microfluidic porous media with broadly varying geometries and show that cell motility results in a succession of scattering events from the porous microstructure. Order or disorder can impact the cells' motility over short ranges, but we directly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks
