Abstract

Observations of uniflagellar bacteria show that buckling instabilities of the hook protein connecting the cell body and flagellum play a role in locomotion. To understand this phenomenon, we develop models at varying levels of description with a particular focus on the parameter dependence of the buckling instability. A key dimensionless group called the flexibility number measures the hook flexibility relative to the thrust exerted by the flagellum; this parameter and the geometric parameters of the cell determine the stability of straight swimming. Two very simple models amenable to analytical treatment are developed to examine buckling in stationary (pinned) and moving swimmers. We then consider a more detailed model incorporating a helical flagellum and the rotational degrees of freedom of the cell body and flagellum, and we use numerical simulations to map out the parameter dependence of the buckling instability. In all models, a bifurcation occurs as the flexibility number increases, separating equilibrium configurations into straight or bent, and for the full model, separating trajectories into straight or helical. More specifically for the latter, the critical flexibility marks the transition from periodicity to quasi-periodicity in the behavior of variables determining configuration. We also find that for a given body geometry, there is a specific flagellar geometry that minimizes the critical flexibility number at which buckling occurs. These results highlight the role of flexibility in the biology of real organisms and the engineering of artificial microswimmers.

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