arXiv Open Access 2022

Effect of dispersants on bacterial colonization of oil droplets: a microfluidic approach

Vincent Hickl Gabriel Juarez
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Abstrak

Bacteria biodegradation of immiscible oil requires cell-droplet encounters, surface attachment, and hydrocarbon metabolism. Chemical dispersants are applied to oil spills to reduce the mean dispersed droplet size, thereby increasing the available surface area for attachment, in attempts to facilitate bacterial biodegradation. However, their effectiveness remains contentious as studies have shown that dispersants can inhibit, enhance, or have no effect on biodegradation. Therefore, questions remain on whether dispersants affect surface attachment or cell viability. Here, using microfluidics and time-lapse microscopy, we directly observe the attachment and growth of the marine bacterium, \emph{Alcanivorax borkumensis}, on stationary crude oil droplets ($5$ \textmu m $< R < 150$ \textmu m) in the presence of Corexit 9500. We show that the average colonization time, or the time comprised of encounters, attachment, and growth, is dependent on droplet size and primarily driven by diffusive encounters. Our results suggest that dispersants do not inhibit or enhance these biophysical processes.

Penulis (2)

V

Vincent Hickl

G

Gabriel Juarez

Format Sitasi

Hickl, V., Juarez, G. (2022). Effect of dispersants on bacterial colonization of oil droplets: a microfluidic approach. https://arxiv.org/abs/2202.00638

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2022
Bahasa
en
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arXiv
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Open Access ✓