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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison between spring network models and continuum constitutive laws: application to the large deformation of a capsule in shear flow.

TLDR
It is found that the mechanical properties of spring networks are strongly dependent on the mesh configuration, and it is hard to express the area incompressibility observed in biological membranes using a simple spring network model.
Abstract
A capsule is a liquid drop enclosed by a solid, deformable membrane. To analyze the deformation of a capsule accurately, both the fluid mechanics of the internal and external fluids and the solid mechanics of the membrane must be solved precisely. Recently, many researchers have used discrete spring network models to express the membrane mechanics of capsules and biological cells. However, it is unclear whether such modeling is sufficiently accurate to solve for capsule deformation. This study examines the correlations between the mechanical properties of the discrete spring network model and continuum constitutive laws. We first compare uniaxial and isotropic deformations of a two-dimensional (2D) sheet, both analytically and numerically. The 2D sheet is discretized with four kinds of mesh to analyze the effect of the spring network configuration. We derive the relationships between the spring constant and continuum properties, such as the Young modulus, Poisson ratio, area dilation modulus, and shear modulus. It is found that the mechanical properties of spring networks are strongly dependent on the mesh configuration. We then calculate the deformation of a capsule under inflation and in a simple shear flow in the Stokes flow regime, using various membrane models. To achieve high accuracy in the flow calculation, a boundary-element method is used. Comparing the results between the different membrane models, we find that it is hard to express the area incompressibility observed in biological membranes using a simple spring network model.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Theory and algorithms to compute Helfrich bending forces : a review

TL;DR: A systematic derive and compare the different routes to obtain bending forces from the Helfrich energy, namely the variational approach and the thin-shell theory, which lead to mathematically identical expressions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation of malaria-infected red blood cells in microfluidic channels: Passage and blockage

TL;DR: These simulations successfully reproduce the experimental observation that with progression of infection, the iRBC transitions from passage to blockage in larger and larger channels, and suggest a scheme for quantifying iR BC rigidification through microfluidic measurements of the critical pressure required for passage.
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Inertial migration of deformable capsules in channel flow

TL;DR: In this article, the cross-stream inertial migration of neutrally buoyant deformable particles in a pressure-driven channel flow is studied using three-dimensional computer simulations, where the particles are modeled as elastic shells filled with a viscous fluid.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the bending algorithms for soft objects in flows

TL;DR: Six different algorithms to compute membrane bending forces, including regularly used methods as well as novel ones, are investigated, finding that none of the considered algorithms converges to zero error at all nodes and that for some algorithms the error even diverges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiscale modelling of erythrocytes in Stokes flow

TL;DR: A computational model by coupling a multiscale approach of RBC membranes with a boundary element method (BEM) for surrounding Stokes flows shows that during tank-treading the protein density variation is insignificant for healthy erythrocytes, but significant for cells with a smaller bilayer–skeleton friction coefficient, which may be the case in hereditary spherocytosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Strain Energy Function of Red Blood Cell Membranes

TL;DR: The several widely different values of the elastic modulus of the human red blood cell membrane are incorporated into a single strain energy function consisting of two terms that are applied to the process of sphering of red blood cells in a hypotonic solution.
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Large deformation of red blood cell ghosts in a simple shear flow

TL;DR: The immersed boundary method is used to simulate three-dimensional membrane-fluid flow interactions for cells with the same internal and external fluid viscosities and it is shown that the red blood cell membrane exhibits asymptotic behavior.
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Deformation of liquid capsules enclosed by elastic membranes in simple shear flow: large deformations and the effect of fluid viscosities

TL;DR: In this paper, the deformation of a liquid capsule enclosed by an elastic membrane in an infinite simple shear flow is studied numerically at vanishing Reynolds numbers using a boundary-element method, where the surface of the capsule is discretized into quadratic triangular elements that form an evolving unstructured grid.
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Numerical simulation of the flow-induced deformation of red blood cells.

TL;DR: Parametric investigations reveal that, in the range of shear rates considered, membrane compressibility has a secondary influence on the cell deformation and on the effective viscosity of a dilute suspension.
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Effect of constitutive laws for two-dimensional membranes on flow-induced capsule deformation

TL;DR: In this paper, three constitutive laws (Skalak et al.'s law extended to area-compressible interfaces, Hooke's law and the Mooney-Rivlin law) commonly used to describe the mechanics of thin membranes are compared.
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