Vorticity-induced surfing and trapping in porous media
Pallabi Das, Mirko Residori, Axel Voigt, Suvendu Mandal, Christina Kurzthaler

TL;DR
This study reveals how microorganisms navigate complex porous environments, showing that flow-induced trapping and surfing lead to universal exit-time distributions and new motility patterns with implications for biofilm formation and microrobot design.
Contribution
It uncovers a novel active transport mechanism involving vorticity-induced trapping and surfing, with universal scaling laws in heterogeneous flows.
Findings
Exit-time distributions follow a universal power-law with exponent ~3/2.
Trapping occurs within the flow backbone due to vorticity-induced reorientation.
A new motility pattern involves alternating surfing and trapping phases.
Abstract
Microorganisms often encounter strong confinement and complex hydrodynamic flows while navigating their habitats. Combining finite-element methods and stochastic simulations, we study the interplay of active transport and heterogeneous flows in dense porous channels. We find that swimming always slows down the traversal of agents across the channel, giving rise to robust power-law tails of their exit-time distributions. These exit-time distributions collapse onto a universal master curve with a scaling exponent of across a wide range of packing fractions and motility parameters, which can be rationalized by a scaling relation. We further identify a new motility pattern where agents alternate between surfing along fast streams and extended trapping phases, the latter determining the power-law exponent. Unexpectedly, trapping occurs in the flow backbone itself -- not only at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Lattice Boltzmann Simulation Studies · Fluid Dynamics and Thin Films
