Hotspots of boundary accumulation: Dynamics and statistics of microswimmers in flowing films

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Abstract

Biological flows over surfaces and interfaces can result in accumulation hotspots or depleted voids of microorganisms in natural environments. Apprehending the mechanisms that lead to such distributions is essential for understanding biofilm initiation. Using a systematic framework, we resolve the dynamics and statistics of swimming microbes within flowing films, considering the impact of confinement throughsteric andhydrodynamic interactions, flowandmotility, along with Brownian and run-tumble fluctuations. Micro-swimmers can be peeled off the solid wall above a critical flow strength. However, the interplay of flow and fluctuations causes organisms to migrate back towards the wall above a secondary critical value. Hence, faster flows may not always be the most efficacious strategy to discourage biofilm initiation. Moreover, we find run-tumble dynamics commonly used by flagellated microbes to be an intrinsicallymore successful strategy to escape fromboundaries than equivalent levels of enhanced Brownian noise in ciliated organisms.

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Mathijssen, A. J. T. M., Doostmohammadi, A., Yeomans, J. M., & Shendruk, T. N. (2016). Hotspots of boundary accumulation: Dynamics and statistics of microswimmers in flowing films. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 13(115). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2015.0936

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