7 research outputs found
Flow rate of transport network controls uniform metabolite supply to tissue
Life and functioning of higher organisms depends on the continuous supply of
metabolites to tissues and organs. What are the requirements on the transport
network pervading a tissue to provide a uniform supply of nutrients, minerals,
or hormones? To theoretically answer this question, we present an analytical
scaling argument and numerical simulations on how flow dynamics and network
architecture control active spread and uniform supply of metabolites by
studying the example of xylem vessels in plants. We identify the fluid inflow
rate as the key factor for uniform supply. While at low inflow rates
metabolites are already exhausted close to flow inlets, too high inflow flushes
metabolites through the network and deprives tissue close to inlets of supply.
In between these two regimes, there exists an optimal inflow rate that yields a
uniform supply of metabolites. We determine this optimal inflow analytically in
quantitative agreement with numerical results. Optimizing network architecture
by reducing the supply variance over all network tubes, we identify patterns of
tube dilation or contraction that compensate sub-optimal supply for the case of
too low or too high inflow rate.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 8 pages supplemen
Robust increase in supply by vessel dilation in globally coupled microvasculature
Neuronal activity induces changes in blood flow by locally dilating vessels
in the brain microvasculature. How can the local dilation of a single vessel
increase flow-based metabolite supply, given that flows are globally coupled
within microvasculature? Solving the supply dynamics for rat brain
microvasculature, we find one parameter regime to dominate physiologically.
This regime allows for robust increase in supply independent of the position in
the network, which we explain analytically. We show that local coupling of
vessels promotes spatially correlated increased supply by dilation
Localisation phase transition in cooperative stochastic resetting
Fluctuations in non-equilibrium systems accumulate over time. Stochastic
resetting, where the state of a system is reset to extrinsically predefined
conditions at random times, is a paradigm for studying the constraint of
fluctuations. Here, we show that cooperative resetting in many-particle systems
can constrain fluctuations in a self-organized manner. We show that systems
where pairs of particles are reset to their mean position exhibit phase
transitions between delocalized and localized states, which exhibit altered
response and improved search behavior compared to extrinsic resetting.Comment: First version of the manuscript. The manuscript includes 4 figures
and consists of 9 pages including an appendi
Supplementary Material from Flow rate of transport network controls uniform metabolite supply to tissue
Life and functioning of higher organisms depends on the continuous supply of metabolites to tissues and organs. What are the requirements on the transport network pervading a tissue to provide a uniform supply of nutrients, minerals or hormones? To theoretically answer this question, we present an analytical scaling argument and numerical simulations on how flow dynamics and network architecture control active spread and uniform supply of metabolites by studying the example of xylem vessels in plants. We identify the fluid inflow rate as the key factor for uniform supply. While at low inflow rates metabolites are already exhausted close to flow inlets, too high inflow flushes metabolites through the network and deprives tissue close to inlets of supply. In between these two regimes, there exists an optimal inflow rate that yields a uniform supply of metabolites. We determine this optimal inflow analytically in quantitative agreement with numerical results. Optimizing network architecture by reducing the supply variance over all network tubes, we identify patterns of tube dilation or contraction that compensate sub-optimal supply for the case of too low or too high inflow rate
Supplementary Material from Flow rate of transport network controls uniform metabolite supply to tissue
Life and functioning of higher organisms depends on the continuous supply of metabolites to tissues and organs. What are the requirements on the transport network pervading a tissue to provide a uniform supply of nutrients, minerals or hormones? To theoretically answer this question, we present an analytical scaling argument and numerical simulations on how flow dynamics and network architecture control active spread and uniform supply of metabolites by studying the example of xylem vessels in plants. We identify the fluid inflow rate as the key factor for uniform supply. While at low inflow rates metabolites are already exhausted close to flow inlets, too high inflow flushes metabolites through the network and deprives tissue close to inlets of supply. In between these two regimes, there exists an optimal inflow rate that yields a uniform supply of metabolites. We determine this optimal inflow analytically in quantitative agreement with numerical results. Optimizing network architecture by reducing the supply variance over all network tubes, we identify patterns of tube dilation or contraction that compensate sub-optimal supply for the case of too low or too high inflow rate