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Confinement, chaotic transport, and trapping of active swimmers in time-periodic flows

Boyang Qin, Paulo E. Arratia

2022Science Advances15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Microorganisms encounter complex unsteady flows, including algal blooms in marine settings, microbial infections in airways, and bioreactors for vaccine and biofuel production. Here, we study the transport of active swimmers in two-dimensional time-periodic flows using Langevin simulations and experiments with swimming bacteria. We find that long-term swimmer transport is controlled by two parameters, the pathlength of the unsteady flow and the normalized swimmer speed. The pathlength nonmonotonically controls swimmer dispersion dynamics, giving rise to three distinct dispersion regimes. Weak flows hinder swimmer transport by confining cells toward flow manifolds. As pathlength increases, chaotic transport along flow manifolds initiates, maximizing the number of unique flow cells traveled. Last, strong flows trap swimmers at the vortex core, suppressing dispersal. Experiments with Vibrio cholerae showed qualitative agreement with model dispersion patterns. Our results reveal that nontrivial chaotic transport can arise in simple unsteady flows and suggest a potentially optimal dispersal strategy for microswimmers in nature.

Topics & Concepts

Biological dispersalChaoticFlow (mathematics)Dispersion (optics)MechanicsPhysicsVortexEnvironmental scienceComputer scienceOpticsPopulationDemographySociologyArtificial intelligenceMicro and Nano RoboticsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing TechnologiesParticle Dynamics in Fluid Flows
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