124 research outputs found

    The role of the separation point in streamwise vortex-induced vibrations

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    Structures in crossflow are susceptible to vortex-induced vibrations (VIV) when the vortex-shedding becomes synchronised with the structural vibration. Strategies to control VIV often include modifying the separation point on the cylinder surface, such as adding helical strakes, although there remains disagreement regarding the mechanism by which these work. We explore the role of the separation point on VIV acting in the streamwise (drag) direction, by performing high-speed Particle-Image Velocimetry (PIV) measurements of the wake and the structural displacement of a range of cylinders with different cross-sectional shapes, including circular (no fixed separation points), equilateral triangles (fixed separation points) and elliptical cylinders (which act as an intermediate case). None of the non-circular cylinders are found to exhibit VIV, despite having approximately the same experimental conditions (mass ratio, structural damping, Reynolds number range, etc.) as the circular cylinders, which undergo VIV. The phase-averaged PIV measurements of the near wake of the circular cylinder are used to calculate the separation angle throughout the shedding cycle for different wake modes, and it is shown that all the wake modes that are associated with VIV require a periodic movement of the separation point. In contrast, the variation in the separation angle was negligible for the von Kármán vortex street observed behind near-stationary circular cylinders and for all non-circular cylinders. The experiments illustrate the great sensitivity of the wake mode and streamwise VIV to modifications of the separation point and demonstrate that even a moderately elliptical cylinder (major to minor axis ratio of 1.54) is sufficient to completely suppress VIV

    Continuum microhaemodynamics modelling using inverse rheology

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    Modelling blood flow in microvascular networks is challenging due to the complex nature of haemorheology. Zero- and one-dimensional approaches cannot reproduce local haemodynamics, and models that consider individual red blood cells (RBCs) are prohibitively computationally expensive. Continuum approaches could provide an efficient solution, but dependence on a large parameter space and scarcity of experimental data for validation has limited their application. We describe a method to assimilate experimental RBC velocity and concentration data into a continuum numerical modelling framework. Imaging data of RBCs were acquired in a sequentially bifurcating microchannel for various flow conditions. RBC concentration distributions were evaluated and mapped into computational fluid dynamics simulations with rheology prescribed by the Quemada model. Predicted velocities were compared to particle image velocimetry data. A subset of cases was used for parameter optimisation, and the resulting model was applied to a wider data set to evaluate model efficacy. The pre-optimised model reduced errors in predicted velocity by 60% compared to assuming a Newtonian fluid, and optimisation further reduced errors by 40%. Asymmetry of RBC velocity and concentration profiles was demonstrated to play a critical role. Excluding asymmetry in the RBC concentration doubled the error, but excluding spatial distributions of shear rate had little effect. This study demonstrates that a continuum model with optimised rheological parameters can reproduce measured velocity if RBC concentration distributions are known a priori. Developing this approach for RBC transport with more network configurations has the potential to provide an efficient approach for modelling network-scale haemodynamics

    Local aggregation characteristics of microscale blood flows

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    Shear-thinning mediation of elasto-inertial Taylor–Couette flow

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    We study the shear-thinning mediation of elasto-inertial transitions in Taylor–Couette flow of viscoelastic polymer solutions. Two types of high molecular weight polymers are used at various concentrations and in water–glycerol solvents of various viscosities. This allows us to access a wide range of elastic numbers and effective shear-thinning indices. Conservative ramp-up (slow acceleration of the inner cylinder and subsequent increase in Reynolds number) and steady-state (constant rotation speed) experiments are performed, in which the flow is monitored continuously using flow visualisation. Depending on the shear-thinning and elastic properties of the working fluid, very different behaviours are observed. In almost constant-viscosity fluids (Boger fluids), or shear-thinning fluids with significant elasticity, the flow transitions from purely azimuthal Couette flow (CF) to a highly chaotic flow state referred to as elasto-inertial turbulence (EIT) via Taylor vortex flow (TVF) and elasto-inertial rotating spiral waves (RSW). When the degree of shear-thinning is increased and elasticity reduced, elastic waves or EIT may fade to a wavy Taylor vortex flow (WTVF) with increasing inertia. Significant shear-thinning leads to a delay in the onset of EIT. Remarkably, in some highly shear-thinning cases, even with a significant elasticity, elastic flow features (EIT, RSW) are completely suppressed, and the flow exhibits a ‘Newtonian-like’ transition sequence (CF–TVF–WTVF). Shear-thinning acts to modify, delay, or even completely suppress elasto-inertial behaviours (RSW, EIT), that would otherwise have existed in the absence of shear-thinning. It is, thus, possible to induce various hydrodynamic regimes by tuning the relative degrees of shear-thinning, elasticity and inertia

    Taylor-Couette flow of polymer solutions with shear-thinning and viscoelastic rheology

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    We study Taylor-Couette flow of a glycerol-water mixture containing a wide range of concentration (0-2000 ppm) of xanthan gum, which induces both shear-thinning and viscoelasticity, in order to assess the effect of the changes in rheology on various flow instabilities. For each suspension, the Reynolds number (the ratio of inertial to viscous forces) is slowly increased to a peak value of around 1000, and the flow is monitored continuously using flow visualisation. Shear-thinning is found to suppress many elasticity-controlled instabilities that have been observed in previous studies of viscoelastic Taylor-Couette flow, such as diwhirls and disordered oscillations. The addition of polymers is found to reduce the critical Reynolds number for the formation of Taylor vortices, but delay the onset of wavy flow. However, in the viscoelastic regime (concentration), the flow becomes highly unsteady soon after the formation of Taylor vortices, with substantial changes in the waviness with Reynolds number, which are shown to be highly repeatable. Vortices are found to suddenly merge as the Reynolds number increases, with the number of mergers increasing with polymer concentration. These abrupt changes in wavelength are highly hysteretic and can occur in both steady and wavy regimes. Finally, the vortices in moderate and dense polymer solutions are shown to undergo a gradual drift in both their size and position, which appears to be closely linked to the splitting and merger of vortices

    Quantifying local characteristics of velocity, aggregation and hematocrit of human erythrocytes in a microchannel flow

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    The effect of erythrocyte aggregation on blood viscosity and microcirculatory flow is a poorly understood area of haemodynamics, especially with relevance to serious pathological conditions. Advances in microfluidics have made it possible to study the details of blood flow in the microscale, however, important issues such as the relationship between the local microstructure and local flow characteristics have not been investigated extensively. In the present study an experimental system involving simple brightfield microscopy has been successfully developed for simultaneous, time-resolved quantification of velocity fields and local aggregation of human red blood cells (RBC) in microchannels. RBCs were suspended in Dextran and phosphate buffer saline solutions for the control of aggregation. Local aggregation characteristics were investigated at bulk and local levels using statistical and edge-detection image processing techniques. A special case of aggregating flow in a microchannel, in which hematocrit gradients were present, was studied as a function of flowrate and time. The level of aggregation was found to strongly correlate with local variations in velocity in both the bulk flow and wall regions. The edge detection based analysis showed that near the side wall large aggregates are associated with regions corresponding to high local velocities and low local shear. On the contrary, in the bulk flow region large aggregates occurred in regions of low velocity and high erythrocyte concentration suggesting a combined effect of hematocrit and velocity distributions on local aggregation characteristics. The results of this study showed that using multiple methods for aggregation quantification, albeit empirical, could help towards a robust characterisation of the structural properties of the fluid
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