Abstract
AbstractDirected motility enables swimming microbes to navigate their environment for resources via chemo-, photo-, and magneto-taxis. However, directed motility competes with fluid flow in porous microbial habitats, affecting biofilm formation and disease transmission. Despite this broad importance, a microscopic understanding of how directed motility impacts the transport of microswimmers in flows through constricted pores remains unknown. Through microfluidic experiments, we show that individual magnetotactic bacteria directed upstream through pores display three distinct regimes, whereby cells swim upstream, become trapped within a pore, or are advected downstream. These transport regimes are reminiscent of the electrical conductivity of a diode and are accurately predicted by a comprehensive Langevin model. The diode-like behavior persists at the pore scale in geometries of higher dimension, where disorder impacts conductivity at the sample scale by extending the trapping regime over a broader range of flow speeds. This work has implications for our understanding of the survival strategies of magnetotactic bacteria in sediments and for developing their use in drug delivery applications in vascular networks.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry
Cited by
20 articles.
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