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research article

Multiscale Porosity Microfluidics to Study Bacterial Transport in Heterogeneous Chemical Landscapes

Salek, M. Mehdi
•
Carrara, Francesco
•
Zhou, Jiande  
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March 6, 2024
Advanced Science

Microfluidic models are proving to be powerful systems to study fundamental processes in porous media, due to their ability to replicate topologically complex environments while allowing detailed, quantitative observations at the pore scale. Yet, while porous media such as living tissues, geological substrates, or industrial systems typically display a porosity that spans multiple scales, most microfluidic models to date are limited to a single porosity or a small range of pore sizes. Here, a novel microfluidic system with multiscale porosity is presented. By embedding polyacrylamide (PAAm) hydrogel structures through in-situ photopolymerization in a landscape of microfabricated polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) pillars with varying spacing, micromodels with porosity spanning several orders of magnitude, from nanometers to millimeters are created. Experiments conducted at different porosity patterns demonstrate the potential of this approach to characterize fundamental and ubiquitous biological and geochemical transport processes in porous media. Accounting for multiscale porosity allows studies of the resulting heterogeneous fluid flow and concentration fields of transported chemicals, as well as the biological behaviors associated with this heterogeneity, such as bacterial chemotaxis. This approach brings laboratory studies of transport in porous media a step closer to their natural counterparts in the environment, industry, and medicine.|Bacterial chemotaxis under flow conditions in response to a nutrient hotspot (uncaged by photolysis) within a multiscale porosity micromodel. image

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/advs.202310121
Web of Science ID

WOS:001179252000001

Author(s)
Salek, M. Mehdi
Carrara, Francesco
Zhou, Jiande  
Stocker, Roman
Jimenez-Martinez, Joaquin
Date Issued

2024-03-06

Publisher

Wiley

Published in
Advanced Science
Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Technology

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Chemotaxis

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Fluid Flow

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Micromodels

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Microscale Porosity

•

Solute Transport

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMIS4  
FunderGrant Number

Swiss National Science Foundation National Centre of Competence in Research

ETH

51NF40_180575

Swiss National Science Foundation National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR) Microbiomes

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Available on Infoscience
March 18, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/206586
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