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Regensburg 2016 – wissenschaftliches Programm

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CPP: Fachverband Chemische Physik und Polymerphysik

CPP 19: Microswimmers (joint session BP/CPP/DY, organized by DY)

CPP 19.8: Vortrag

Dienstag, 8. März 2016, 11:45–12:00, H47

Confinement of Single Microswimmers in Circular Microfluidic Chambers — •Tanya Ostapenko, Thomas Böddeker, Christian Kreis, Fabian Schwarzendahl, Marco G. Mazza, and Oliver Bäumchen — Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization (MPIDS), Am Fassberg 17, 37077 Göttingen, Germany

The characteristics of active fluids, such as suspensions of biological microswimmers, may not only originate from the mutual interactions between the constituents, but also from interactions with interfaces and confining walls. In fact, the natural habitats of many living organisms are complex geometric environments, rather than bulk situations. The influence of interfaces on the dynamics was recognized as an important factor, and there are differences in the way that pusher-type swimmers (e.g. E. coli) and puller-type swimmers (e.g. C. reinhardtii) behave close to flat interfaces. Using experiments and simulations, we report on the dynamics of single puller-type swimmers in 2D circular microfluidic chambers. We find that the radial probability distribution of trajectories displays a characteristic wall hugging effect, where swimmers remain trapped at a concave interface for decreasing chamber size. For trajectories in the vicinity of the concave wall, an alignment of the local swimming direction with the local wall tangent is observed. In contrast, the swimmers tend to scatter off convex interfaces with short interaction times. Based on geometric arguments involving the swimmer’s persistence length, we explain this entrapment effect at concave interfaces.

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