Suspending self-propelled “pushers” in a liquid lowers its viscosity. We study how this phenomenon depends on system size in bacterial suspensions using bulk rheometry and particle-tracking rheoimaging. Above the critical bacterial volume fraction needed to decrease the viscosity to zero, φc ≈ 0.75%, large-scale collective motion emerges in the quiescent state, and the flow becomes nonlinear. We confirm a theoretical prediction that such instability should be suppressed by confinement. Our results also show that a recent application of active liquid-crystal theory to such systems is untenable.
CITATION STYLE
Martinez, V. A., Clément, E., Arlt, J., Douarche, C., Dawson, A., Schwarz-Linek, J., … Poon, W. C. K. (2020). A combined rheometry and imaging study of viscosity reduction in bacterial suspensions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(5), 2326–2331. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1912690117
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