Bacterial Barriers: How bacterial activity enhances transport barriers in chaotic flows

POSTER

Abstract

In thisstalk, we will discuss the effects of bacterial activity on the mixing and transport properties of a passive scalar in time-periodic flows in experiments and in a simple model. We focus on the interactions between swimming Escherichia coli and the Lagrangian coherent structures (LCSs) of the flow, which are computed from experimentally measured velocity fields. Experiments show that such interactions are non-trivial and can lead to transport barriers through which the scalar flux is significantly reduced. Using the Poincaré map, we show that these transport barriers coincide with the outermost members of elliptic LCSs known as Lagrangian vortex boundaries. Numerical simulations further show that elliptic LCSs can repel elongated swimmers and lead to swimmer depletion within Lagrangian coherent vortices. A simple mechanism shows that such depletion is due to the preferential alignment of elongated swimmers with the tangents of elliptic LCSs. Our results provide insights into understanding the transport of micro-organisms in complex flows with dynamical topological features from a Lagrangian viewpoint.

Publication: Ran R, Arratia PE. Enhancing transport barriers with swimming micro-organisms in chaotic flows. Journal of Fluid Mechanics. 2024;988:A25. doi:10.1017/jfm.2024.452

Presenters

  • Paulo E. Arratia

    University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Paulo E. Arratia

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Ranjiangshang Ran

    Emory University