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Showing papers by "Young I. Cho published in 1983"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In vitro investigation of pulsatile and steady flows through a smooth, straight circular tube and a diseased human coronary artery cast was conducted with sugar-water solutions simulating the viscosity of blood, finding pressure drops for steady flows were greater than Poiseuille flow predictions.

52 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of solvent chemistry on steady shear viscosity and first normal stress difference for aqueous polyacrylamide solutions (Separan AP-273) was investigated in the Weissenberg rheogoniometer and capillary tube viscometer.
Abstract: The influence of solvent chemistry on steady shear viscosity and first normal stress difference for aqueous polyacrylamide solutions (Separan AP-273) was investigated in the Weissenberg rheogoniometer and capillary tube viscometer. It was found that these rheological properties are particularly sensitive to the chemistry of the solvent. For example, the zero shear rate viscosity of a 1000 wppm Separan solution with distilled water as the solvent was greater than that with Chicago tap water as the solvent by a factor of 25, while the first normal force difference varied by a factor of two. The addition of an acid or a base to the Chicago tap water-Separan solution also influenced the zero shear rate viscosity and first normal force difference. It was found that there is an optimum pH of approximately 10 which yields a maximum value of the zero shear rate viscosity for the Separan-tap water solution. Limited data on the influence of solvent chemistry were obtained for 5000 wppm aqueous solutions of...

7 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In-vitro, steady flow in a casting of the profunda femoris branch of the femoral artery of man was studied by measuring pressure differences in the main lumen and also in the branch over a large Reynolds number range from 200 to 1600.
Abstract: In-vitro, steady flow in a casting of the profunda femoris branch of the femoral artery of man was studied by measuring pressure differences in the main lumen and also in the branch over a large Reynolds number range from 200 to 1600. Effects of viscous and inviscid flows in this femoral artery branch were demonstrated quantitatively. The critical ratio of the flow rate in the branch to the upstream main lumen, m3/m1, in this casting was found to be 0.4, above which the inviscid flow analysis indicated a pressure rise and below which it yielded a pressure drop in the main lumen across the branch junction. Pressure rises were experimentally found to occur both in the main lumen and in the branch for certain ranges of m3/m1.

6 citations