Fluid-driven Interfacial instabilities and turbulence in bacterial biofilms
Fluid-driven Interfacial instabilities and turbulence in bacterial biofilms
Biofilms are thin layers of bacteria embedded within a slime matrix that live on surfaces. They are ubiquitous in nature and responsible for many medical and dental infections, industrial fouling and are also evident in ancient fossils. A biofilm structure is shaped by growth, detachment and response to mechanical forces acting on them. The main contribution to biofilm versatility in response to physical forces is the matrix that provides a platform for the bacteria to grow. The interaction between biofilm structure and hydrodynamics remains a fundamental question concerning biofilm dynamics. Here we document the appearance of ripples and wrinkles in biofilms grown from three species of bacteria when subjected to rapid high-velocity fluid flows. Theoretical treatment of the process as a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability indicates that the rippling process was primarily due to physics rather than chemistry or biology. The analysis also predicted a strong dependence of the instability formation on biofilm viscosity explaining the different surface corrugations observed. Turbulence through Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities occurring at the interface demonstrated that the biofilm flows like a viscous liquid under high flow velocities applied within milliseconds. Biofilm fluid-like behavior may have important implications for our understanding of how fluid flow influences biofilm biology since turbulence will likely disrupt metabolite and signal gradients as well as community stratification.
Biofilm, high-speed camera, fluid dynamics, Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities, mathematical modelling, microsprays
University of Southampton
Fabbri, Stefania
c93b6166-2117-48a9-9a88-b23a62c7b5da
Stoodley, Paul
08614665-92a9-4466-806e-20c6daeb483f
Fabbri, Stefania
c93b6166-2117-48a9-9a88-b23a62c7b5da
Stoodley, Paul
08614665-92a9-4466-806e-20c6daeb483f
Fabbri, Stefania and Stoodley, Paul
(2017)
Fluid-driven Interfacial instabilities and turbulence in bacterial biofilms.
University of Southampton
doi:10.5258/SOTON/387042
[Dataset]
Abstract
Biofilms are thin layers of bacteria embedded within a slime matrix that live on surfaces. They are ubiquitous in nature and responsible for many medical and dental infections, industrial fouling and are also evident in ancient fossils. A biofilm structure is shaped by growth, detachment and response to mechanical forces acting on them. The main contribution to biofilm versatility in response to physical forces is the matrix that provides a platform for the bacteria to grow. The interaction between biofilm structure and hydrodynamics remains a fundamental question concerning biofilm dynamics. Here we document the appearance of ripples and wrinkles in biofilms grown from three species of bacteria when subjected to rapid high-velocity fluid flows. Theoretical treatment of the process as a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability indicates that the rippling process was primarily due to physics rather than chemistry or biology. The analysis also predicted a strong dependence of the instability formation on biofilm viscosity explaining the different surface corrugations observed. Turbulence through Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities occurring at the interface demonstrated that the biofilm flows like a viscous liquid under high flow velocities applied within milliseconds. Biofilm fluid-like behavior may have important implications for our understanding of how fluid flow influences biofilm biology since turbulence will likely disrupt metabolite and signal gradients as well as community stratification.
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Published date: 2017
Keywords:
Biofilm, high-speed camera, fluid dynamics, Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities, mathematical modelling, microsprays
Organisations:
Education Hub, nCATS Group
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Local EPrints ID: 387042
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/387042
PURE UUID: 6e50a457-5c58-4601-8f35-a79fdfb30aba
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Date deposited: 15 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 05 Nov 2023 02:44
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Creator:
Stefania Fabbri
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