6,035 research outputs found

    The 'Sphere': A Dedicated Bifurcation Aneurysm Flow-Diverter Device.

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    We present flow-based results from the early stage design cycle, based on computational modeling, of a prototype flow-diverter device, known as the 'Sphere', intended to treat bifurcation aneurysms of the cerebral vasculature. The device is available in a range of diameters and geometries and is constructed from a single loop of NITINOL(®) wire. The 'Sphere' reduces aneurysm inflow by means of a high-density, patterned, elliptical surface that partially occludes the aneurysm neck. The device is secured in the healthy parent vessel by two armatures in the shape of open loops, resulting in negligible disruption of parent or daughter vessel flow. The device is virtually deployed in six anatomically accurate bifurcation aneurysms: three located at the Basilar tip and three located at the terminus bifurcation of the Internal Carotid artery (at the meeting of the middle cerebral and anterior cerebral arteries). Both steady state and transient flow simulations reveal that the device presents with a range of aneurysm inflow reductions, with mean flow reductions falling in the range of 30.6-71.8% across the different geometries. A significant difference is noted between steady state and transient simulations in one geometry, where a zone of flow recirculation is not captured in the steady state simulation. Across all six aneurysms, the device reduces the WSS magnitude within the aneurysm sac, resulting in a hemodynamic environment closer to that of a healthy vessel. We conclude from extensive CFD analysis that the 'Sphere' device offers very significant levels of flow reduction in a number of anatomically accurate aneurysm sizes and locations, with many advantages compared to current clinical cylindrical flow-diverter designs. Analysis of the device's mechanical properties and deployability will follow in future publications

    High pressure viscosity measurement with falling body type viscometers

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    With the increasing number of applications of high pressure chemical and process technologies across a range of engineering fields, there is a corresponding growing interest in the need to measure accurately and reliably important rheological parameters. Of these, the measurement of good and reliable viscosity data is critical in engineering design. The ability to measure viscosity at high pressure, however, presents a number of engineering challenges and a number of innovative viscometers have consequently been devised and operated. This review considers those devices which are based on the falling body principle and considers falling ball, cylinder and needle in open and closed systems. Viscosity is determined from the rate of fall and the usual challenge is to detect its position during descent. While reliable data can be obtained from these viscometers, there is a discrepancy between theoretical values and actual values. This is the result of end effects in the form of vortices, wake oscillations and hedding. Calibration is therefore necessary in all cases. Improvements to analytical models have been attempted and computation fluid dynamics is also used to examine in more detail the flow fields around bodies to understand and appreciate better the performance of these viscometers

    Deformability-induced effects of red blood cells in flow

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    To ensure a proper health state in the human body, a steady transport of blood is necessary. As the main cellular constituent in the blood suspension, red blood cells (RBCs) are governing the physical properties of the entire blood flow. Remarkably, these RBCs can adapt their shape to the prevailing surrounding flow conditions, ultimately allowing them to pass through narrow capillaries smaller than their equilibrium diameter. However, several diseases such as diabetes mellitus or malaria are linked to an alteration of the deformability. In this work, we investigate the shapes of RBCs in microcapillary flow in vitro, culminating in a shape phase diagram of two distinct, hydrodynamically induced shapes, the croissant and the slipper. Due to the simplicity of the RBC structure, the obtained phase diagram leads to further insights into the complex interaction between deformable objects in general, such as vesicles, and the surrounding fluid. Furthermore, the phase diagram is highly correlated to the deformability of the RBCs and represents thus a cornerstone of a potential diagnostic tool to detect pathological blood parameters. To further promote this idea, we train a convolutional neural network (CNN) to classify the distinct RBC shapes. The benchmark of the CNN is validated by manual classification of the cellular shapes and yields very good performance. In the second part, we investigate an effect that is associated with the deformability of RBCs, the lingering phenomenon. Lingering events may occur at bifurcation apices and are characterized by a straddling of RBCs at an apex, which have been shown in silico to cause a piling up of subsequent RBCs. Here, we provide insight into the dynamics of such lingering events in vivo, which we consequently relate to the partitioning of RBCs at bifurcating vessels in the microvasculature. Specifically, the lingering of RBCs causes an increased intercellular distance to RBCs further downstream, and thus, a reduced hematocrit.Um die biologischen Funktionen im menschlichen Körper aufrechtzuerhalten ist eine stetige Versorgung mit Blut notwendig. Rote Blutzellen bilden den Hauptanteil aller zellulären Komponenten im Blut und beeinflussen somit maßgeblich dessen Fließeigenschaften. Eine bemerkenswerte Eigenschaft dieser roten Blutzellen ist ihre Deformierbarkeit, die es ihnen ermöglicht, ihre Form den vorherrschenden Strömungsbedingungen anzupassen und sogar durch Kapillaren zu strömen, deren Durchmesser kleiner ist als der Gleichgewichtsdurchmesser einer roten Blutzelle. Zahlreiche Erkrankungen wie beispielsweise Diabetes mellitus oder Malaria sind jedoch mit einer Veränderung dieser Deformierbarkeit verbunden. In der vorliegenden Arbeit untersuchen wir die hydrodynamisch induzierten Formen der roten Blutzellen in mikrokapillarer Strömung in vitro systematisch für verschiedene Fließgeschwindigkeiten. Aus diesen Daten erzeugen wir ein Phasendiagramm zweier charakteristischer auftretender Formen: dem Croissant und dem Slipper. Aufgrund der Einfachheit der Struktur der roten Blutzellen führt das erhaltene Phasendiagramm zu weiteren Erkenntnissen über die komplexe Interaktion zwischen deformierbaren Objekten im Allgemeinen, wie z.B. Vesikeln, und des sie umgebenden Fluids. Darüber hinaus ist das Phasendiagramm korreliert mit der Deformierbarkeit der Erythrozyten und stellt somit einen Eckpfeiler eines potentiellen Diagnosewerkzeugs zur Erkennung pathologischer Blutparameter dar. Um diese Idee weiter voranzutreiben, trainieren wir ein künstliches neuronales Netz, um die auftretenden Formen der Erythrozyten zu klassifizieren. Die Ausgabe dieses künstlichen neuronalen Netzes wird durch manuelle Klassifizierung der Zellformen validiert und weist eine sehr hohe Übereinstimmung mit dieser manuellen Klassifikation auf. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit untersuchen wir einen Effekt, der sich direkt aus der Deformierbarkeit der roten Blutzellen ergibt, das Lingering-Phänomen. Diese Lingering-Ereignisse können an Bifurkationsscheiteln zweier benachbarter Kapillaren auftreten und sind durch ein längeres Verweilen von Erythrozyten an einem Scheitelpunkt gekennzeichnet. In Simulationen hat sich gezeigt, dass diese Dynamik eine Anhäufung von nachfolgenden roten Blutzellen verursacht. Wir analysieren die Dynamik solcher Verweilereignisse in vivo, die wir folglich mit der Aufteilung von Erythrozyten an sich gabelnden Gefäßen in der Mikrovaskulatur in Verbindung bringen. Insbesondere verursacht das Verweilen von Erythrozyten einen erhöhten interzellulären Abstand zu weiter stromabwärts liegenden Erythrozyten und damit einen reduzierten Hämatokrit

    A New Approach to Model Confined Suspensions Flows in Complex Networks: Application to Blood Flow

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    The modeling of blood flows confined in micro-channels or micro-capillary beds depends on the interactions between the cell-phase, plasma and the complex geometry of the network. In the case of capillaries or channels having a high aspect ratio (their longitudinal size is much larger than their transverse one), this modeling is much simplified from the use of a continuous description of fluid viscosity as previously proposed in the literature. Phase separation or plasma skimming effect is a supplementary mechanism responsible for the relative distribution of the red blood cell’s volume density in each branch of a given bifur- cation. Different models have already been proposed to connect this effect to the various hydrodynamics and geometrical parameters at each bifurcation. We discuss the advantages and drawbacks of these models and compare them to an alternative approach for modeling phase distribution in complex channels networks. The main novelty of this new formulation is to show that albeit all the previous approaches seek for a local origin of the phase segre- gation phenomenon, it can arise from a global non-local and nonlinear structuration of the flow inside the network. This new approach describes how elementary conservation laws are sufficient principles (rather than the complex arametric models previously proposed) to provide non local phase separation. Spatial variations of the hematocrit field thus result from the topological complexity of the network as well as nonlinearities arising from solving a new free boundary problem associated with the flux and mass conservation. This network model approach could apply to model blood flow distribution either on artificial micro-models, micro-fluidic networks, or realistic reconstruction of biological micro-vascular networks
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