1,733 research outputs found
Numerical simulation and nasal air-conditioning
Heating and humidification of the respiratory air are the main functions of the nasal airways in addition to cleansing and olfaction. Optimal nasal air conditioning is mandatory for an ideal pulmonary gas exchange in order to avoid desiccation and adhesion of the alveolar capillary bed. The complex three-dimensional anatomical structure of the nose makes it impossible to perform detailed in vivo studies on intranasal heating and humidification within the entire nasal airways applying various technical set-ups. The main problem of in vivo temperature and humidity measurements is a poor spatial and time resolution. Therefore, in vivo measurements are feasible only to a restricted extent, solely providing single temperature values as the complete nose is not entirely accessible. Therefore, data on the overall performance of the nose are only based on one single measurement within each nasal segment. In vivo measurements within the entire nose are not feasible
Recommended from our members
Flow and particle deposition using an integrated CFD model of the respiratory system
This paper was presented at the 3rd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2011), which was held at the Makedonia Palace Hotel, Thessaloniki in Greece. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Thessaly, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute.In the present study a theoretical investigation on flow, particle motion, and deposition in the respiratory system is reported. An integrated computational model of the respiratory system is developed
comprised of nine sequential computational blocks corresponding to the nasal cavity, the pharyngo-trachea, and a series of branches of the pulmonary system. Airflow during steady-state inhalation inside the human respiratory system was determined using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) for inlet velocities, vin = 1-20 m/s, corresponding to inhalation flow rates of 9 to 180 L/min, and particle deposition was examined in detail for particle sizes, D=1-20ÎĽm. Local deposition efficiencies as well as spatial distribution of deposited particles were found to be strongly dependent on the particle size and volumetric flow rate
Dynamics of airflow in a short inhalation
During a rapid inhalation, such as a sniff, the flow in the airways
accelerates and decays quickly. The consequences for flow development and
convective trans- port of an inhaled gas were investigated in a subject
geometry extending from the nose to the bronchi. The progress of flow
transition and the advance of an inhaled non-absorbed gas were determined using
highly resolved simulations of a sniff 0.5 s long, 1 litre per second peak
flow, 364 ml inhaled volume. In the nose, the distribution of airflow evolved
through three phases: (i) an initial transient of about 50 ms, roughly the
filling time for a nasal volume, (ii) quasi-equilibrium over the majority of
the inhalation, and (iii) a terminating phase. Flow transition commenced in the
supraglottic region within 20ms, resulting in large- amplitude fluctuations
persisting throughout the inhalation; in the nose, fluctuations that arose
nearer peak flow were of much reduced intensity and diminished in the flow
decay phase. Measures of gas concentration showed non-uniform build-up and
wash-out of the inhaled gas in the nose. At the carina, the form of the
temporal concentration profile reflected both shear dispersion and airway
filling defects owing to recirculation regions.Comment: 15 page
Correlation of nasal morphology to air-conditioning and clearance function
Nasal morphology plays an important functional role in the maintenance of upper airway health. Identification of functional regions, based on morphological attributes, assists in correlating location to primary purpose. The effects of morphological variation on heat and water mass transport in congested and patent nasal airways were investigated by examining nasal cross-sectional MRI images from 8 healthy subjects. This research confirms the previous identification of functional air-conditioning regions within the nose. The first is the anterior region where the morphology prevents over-stressing of tissue heat and fluid supply near the nares. The second is the mid region where low flow velocity favours olfaction and particle deposition. The third is the posterior region which demonstrates an increase in heat and water mass flux coefficients to compensate for rising air humidity and temperature. Factors identified within the congested airway that favour enhanced mucocillary clearance were also identified
Voxel-based modeling of airflow in the human nasal cavity
This paper describes the simulation of airflow in human nasal airways using voxel-based modeling characterized by robust, automatic, and objective grid generation. Computed tomography scans of a healthy adult nose are used to reconstruct 3D virtual models of the nasal airways. Voxel-based simulations of restful inspiratory flow are then performed using various mesh sizes to determine the level of granularity required to adequately resolve the airflow. For meshes with close voxel spacings, the model successfully reconstructs the nasal structure and predicts the overall pressure drop through the nasal cavity
CFD Simulations on the Heating Capability in a Human Nasal Cavity
The air conditioning capability of the nose is dependent on the nasal mucosal temperature and the airflow dynamics caused by the airway geometry. A computational model of a human nasal cavity obtained through CT scans was produced and CFD techniques were applied to study the effects of morphological differences in the left and right nasal cavity on the airflow and heat transfer of inhaled air. A laminar steady flow of 10L/min was applied and two inhalation conditions were investigated: normal conditions, 25°C, 35% relative humidity and cold dry air conditions, 12°C, 13% relative humidity. It was found that the frontal regions of the nasal cavity exhibited greater secondary cross flows compared to the middle and back regions. The left cavity in the front region had a smaller cross-sectional area compared to the right which allowed greater heating as the heat source from the wall was closer to the bulk flow regions. Additionally it was found that the residence time of the inhaled air was important for the heating ability in laminar flows
Biomedical and biophysical limits to mathematical modeling of pulmonary system mechanics: a scoping review on aerosol and drug delivery.
Undoubtedly, the construction of the biomechanical geometry systems with the help of computer tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has made a significant advancement in studying in vitro numerical models as accurately as possible. However, some simplifying assumptions in the computational studies of the respiratory system have caused errors and deviations from the in vivo actual state. The most important of these hypotheses is how to generate volume from the point cloud exported from CT or MRI images, not paying attention to the wall thickness and its effect in computational fluid dynamic method, statistical logic of aerosol trap in software; and most importantly, the viscoelastic effect of respiratory tract wall in living tissue pointed in the fluid-structure interaction method. So that applying the viscoelastic dynamic mesh effect in the form of the moving deforming mesh can be very effective in achieving more appropriate response quality. Also, changing the volume fraction of the pulmonary extracellular matrix constituents leads to changes in elastic modulus (storage modulus) and the viscous modulus (loss modulus) of lung tissue. Therefore, in the biomedical computational methods where the model wall is considered flexible, the viscoelastic properties of the texture must be considered correctly
- …