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Phase separation in mixed suspensions of bacteria and nonadsorbing polymers

Authors :
Remco Tuinier
Vincent F. D. Peters
H. N. W. Lekkerkerker
Mark Vis
Physical Chemistry
Institute for Complex Molecular Systems
ICMS Core
Source :
Journal of Chemical Physics, 154(15):151101. American Chemical Society
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

The shapes of bacteria can vary widely; they may, for instance, be spherical, rod-like, string-like, or curved. In general, bacilli are highly anisotropic. For research and (bio)technological purposes, it can be useful to concentrate bacteria, which is possible by adding nonadsorbing polymers. The induced phase separation originates from a polymer-mediated depletion interaction, first understood by Asakura and Oosawa. Here, it is shown that free volume theory (FVT) can semi-quantitatively describe the phase transitions observed when adding sodium polystyrene sulfonate polymers to E. coli bacteria [Schwarz-Linek et al., Soft Matter 6, 4540 (2010)] at high ionic strength. The E. coli bacteria are described as short, hard spherocylinders. FVT predicts that the phase transitions of the mixtures result from a fluid-ABC crystal solid phase coexistence of a hard spherocylinder-polymer mixture.

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
154
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....155b598dc86159221204a0fbc9a1e0c0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0045435