Control of bacterial dynamics by splay and bend in nematic vortices
ORAL
Abstract
Microswimmers exhibit collective behavior that can be controlled by an anisotropic environment such as a lyotropic chromonic liquid crystal. We explore the effect of splay and bend of the director field on the individual and collective behavior of motile Bacilli subtilis. The director field, imposed through photoalignment, is designed in the form of vortices of topological charge +1. Their geometry changes from pure radial to spiral and to the circular, representing thus deformations of a pure splay, splay-bend mix, and pure bend, respectively. In dilute dispersions, the bacteria follow the pre-imposed director field, but after their concentration reaches some threshold, they engage in a collective unipolar circulation. This collective behavior is controlled by the splay-to-bend ratio: vortices with dominating splay condense the bacterial swarms towards the center, while vortices with dominating bend push them away to the periphery. Vortices with splay-bend parity formed by 45-degree spiraling director produce the most stable swarming with a time-independent radius as long as the bacterial activity is constant. The change in swimming scenario as a function of splay-to-bend ratio is reminiscent of an unstable limit cycle.
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Presenters
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Runa Koizumi
Kent State Univ - Kent
Authors
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Runa Koizumi
Kent State Univ - Kent
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Taras Turiv
Kent State Univ - Kent
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Mikhail Genkin
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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Robert Lastowski
Kent State Univ - Kent
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Hao Yu
Kent State Univ - Kent
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Irakli Chaganava
Georgian State Teaching University of Physical Education and Sport
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Qihuo Wei
Kent State Univ - Kent
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Igor Aronson
Pennsylvania State University, Biomedical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University
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Oleg D Lavrentovich
Kent State Univ - Kent, Chemical Physics Interdisciplinary Program; Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State Univ - Kent, Department of Physics, Chemical Physics Interdisciplinary Program, and Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State University