Time-resolved study of biofilm architecture and transport processes using experimental and simulation techniques: The role of EPS

M. Kuehn*, M. Mehl, M. Hausner, H. J. Bungartz, S. Wuertz

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cellular material and extracellular polymerics substances are the basic structural elements in biofilm systems. The structure and role of EPS for biofilm development and metabolic processes have not been precisely determined and, therefore, have not yet been included as a necessary element in modelling and simulation studies. This is due to the difficulty of experimentally detecting the extracellular polymeric substances in situ and differentiating them from cellular material on the one hand, and to the subsequent uncertainty about appropriate models - e.g. rigid hindrances, porous microstructure or visco-elastic structure - on the other hand. In this work, were report on the use of confocal laser scanning microscopy to monitor the development of a monoculture biofilm of Sphingomonas sp. grown in a flow cell. The bacterial strain was genetically labelled resulting in strong constitutive expression of the green fluorescent protein. The development of extracellular polymeric substances was followed by binding of the lectin concavalin A to cell exopolysaccharides. The growth of the resulting strain was digitally recorded by automated confocal laser scanning microscopy. In addition, local velocity profiles of fluorescent carboxylate-modified microspheres were observed on pathlines throughout the biofilm. The CLSM image stacks were used as direct input for the explicit modelling and three-dimensional numerical simulation of flow fields and solute transport processes based on the conservation laws of continuum mechanics. At present, a strongly simplifying EPS-model is applied for numerical simulations. The EPS are preliminary assumed to behave like a rigid dense hindrance with diffusive-reactive solute transport.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)143-150
Number of pages8
JournalWater Science and Technology
Volume43
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2001
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Environmental Engineering
  • Water Science and Technology

Keywords

  • Computational fluid dynamics
  • Computer-controlled image acquisition and analysis
  • Confocal laser scanning microscopy
  • Numerical simulation

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