4.5 Article

The porous structure induced heterogeneous and localized failure of the biofilm in microfluidic channels

Journal

WATER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wst.2023.384

Keywords

biofilm; localized failure; microfluidic; permeability; porous media

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Understanding the mechanism of biofilm distribution and detachment is crucial for water treatment and prevention of clogging in porous media. This study reveals that bacterial aggregation in smaller pores leads to biofilm formation and blockage. The detachment of biofilm is correlated with its morphology and permeability, and occurs through internal detachment or external erosion.
Understanding the mechanism of biofilm distribution and detachment is very important to effectively improve water treatment and prevent blockage in porous media. The existing research is more related to the local biofilm evolving around one or few microposts and the lack of the integral biofilm evolution in a micropost array for a longer growth period. This study combines microfluidic experiments and mathematical simulations to study the distribution and detachment of biofilm in porous media. Microfluidic chips with an array of microposts with different sizes are designed to simulate the physical pore structure of soil. The research shows that the initial formation and distribution of biofilm are influenced by bacterial transport velocity gradients within the pore space. Bacteria prefer to aggregate areas with smaller microposts, leading to the development of biofilm in those regions. Consequently, impermeable blockage structures form in this area. By analyzing experimental images of biofilm structures at the later stages, as well as coupling fluid flow and porous medium, and the finite element simulation, we find that the biofilm detachment is correlated with the morphology and permeability (kb) (from 10(-15 )to 10(-9) m(2)) of the biofilm. The simulations show that there are two modes of biofilm detachment, such as internal detachment and external erosion.

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