20 research outputs found
Effect of tube diameter and capillary number on platelet margination and near-wall dynamics
The effect of tube diameter and capillary number on platelet
margination in blood flow at tube haematocrit is investigated.
The system is modelled as three-dimensional suspension of deformable red blood
cells and nearly rigid platelets using a combination of the lattice-Boltzmann,
immersed boundary and finite element methods. Results show that margination is
facilitated by a non-diffusive radial platelet transport. This effect is
important near the edge of the cell-free layer, but it is only observed for , when red blood cells are tank-treading rather than tumbling. It is also
shown that platelet trapping in the cell-free layer is reversible for . Only for the smallest investigated tube ()
margination is essentially independent of . Once platelets have reached the
cell-free layer, they tend to slide rather than tumble. The tumbling rate is
essentially independent of but increases with . Tumbling is suppressed
by the strong confinement due to the relatively small cell-free layer thickness
at tube haematocrit.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure