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Motility of flagellated bacteria in colloidal media

ORAL

Abstract

Recent years have seen increasing interests in understanding the mechanism and motility of microswimmers in non-Newtonian fluids due to their relevance in biological and biomedical applications. Nevertheless, despite extensive study on the locomotion of microswimmers in polymeric fluids, their motion in a colloidal suspension remains largely unexplored. Here, we study the motility of \textit{E. coli}, a flagellated bacterium in colloidal media. We systematically vary the size of colloidal particles from 50 nm to 1 $\mu $m and the volume fraction up to 20{\%}. The motion of fluorescent-labeled bacteria is imaged using confocal microscopy and speeds of bacteria are extracted using a robust in-house tracking algorithm. Our results show that bacterial mobility decreases with increasing volume fractions at low volume fractions, but remains constant beyond a critical volume fraction. In addition, we find that the motility depends on the size of passive colloid. Finally, we construct a simple model that qualitatively explains our experimental observation. This work enriches the current understanding of microswimmers' locomotion in complex fluids.

Authors

  • Shashank Kamdar

    Department of Chemical and Materials Science, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

  • Lorraine F. Francis

    Department of Chemical and Materials Science, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

  • Xiang Cheng

    University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, University of Minnesota, Department of Chemical and Materials Science, University of Minnesota Twin Cities