Web Release Date: November 25,
Analysis of Column Tortuosity for MnCl2 and Bacterial Diffusion Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging
and

Program of Interdisciplinary Research in Contaminant Hydrogeology, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4742 and Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904-4741
Received for review March 18, 2004
Revised manuscript received October 5, 2004
Accepted October 6, 2004
Abstract:
Subsurface bacteria often have to travel significant
distances through tortuous porous media for purposes of
groundwater remediation. In modeling such processes, motile
bacteria are often represented as suspended colloids,
ignoring their individual swimming or diffusive properties.
In fact, bacterial migration is much more profoundly
affected by the presence of porous media than is that of
a chemical contaminant. In this study, we use magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) to perform noninvasive measure
ments of changes in bacterial concentration distributions
across a packed column at a spatial resolution of 330
m as
a function of time. We analyze the diffusive behavior of
Pseudomonas putida F1 under static conditions and compare
that behavior to the diffusion of a chemical solute and
of Escherichia coli NR50. Results indicate that P. putida
cells experience a column tortuosity 50 times higher than
that predicted from solute diffusion experiments. E. coli
cells, which display shorter swimming run lengths in bulk
solution than P. putida, seem to be less affected by the
constricted pore space. Knudsen diffusion, or reductions in
run length because of interactions between the diffusing
bacteria and the porous media, may help to explain some of
this discrepancy.
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