| Literature DB >> 29347505 |
Giorgia Guccione1, Daniela Pimponi2, Paolo Gualtieri2, Mauro Chinappi3.
Abstract
We analyzed the effect of confinement on the effective diffusion of a run-and-tumble E. coli-like flagellated microswimmer. We used a simulation protocol where the run phases are obtained via a fully resolved swimming problem, i.e., Stokes equations for the fluid coupled with rigid-body dynamics for the microorganism, while tumbles and collisions with the walls are modeled as random reorientation of the microswimmer. For weak confinement, the swimmer is trapped in circular orbits close to the solid walls. In this case, optimal diffusivity is observed when the tumbling frequency is comparable with the angular velocity of the stable orbits. For strong confinement, stable circular orbits disappear and the diffusion coefficient monotonically decreases with the tumbling rate. Our findings are generic and can be potentially applied to other natural or artificial chiral microswimmers that follow circular trajectories close to an interface or in confined geometries.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29347505 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.96.042603
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev E ISSN: 2470-0045 Impact factor: 2.529