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Journal ArticleDOI

Heat transfer to blood vessels

TLDR
The effect of a blood vessel on the temperature distribution of the skin directly above it and on the heat transfer to the environment increases with decreasing depth-to-radius ratio and decreasing Biot number based on radius.
Abstract
Heat transfer to individual blood vessels has been investigated in three configurations: a single vessel, two vessels in counterflow, and a single vessel near the skin surface. For a single vessel the Graetz number is the controlling parameter. The arterioles, capillaries, and venules have very low Graetz numbers, Gz < 0.4, and act as perfect heat exchangers in which the blood quickly reaches the tissue temperature. The large arteries and veins with Graetz numbers over 10(3) have virtually no heat exchange with the tissue, and blood leaves them at near the entering temperature. Heat transfer between parallel vessels in counterflow is influenced most strongly by the relative distance of separation anad by the mass transferred from the artery to the vein along the length. These two effects are of the same order of magnitude, whereas the film coefficients in the blood flow are of significant but lesser importance. The effect of a blood vessel on the temperature distribution of the skin directly above it and on the heat transfer to the environment increases with decreasing depth-to-radius ratio and decreasing Biot number based on radius. The absolute magnitude of these effects is independent of other linear effects, such as internal heat generation or a superimposed one-dimensional heat flux.

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A model of human physiology and comfort for assessing complex thermal environments

TL;DR: The Berkeley comfort model as mentioned in this paper is based on the Stolwijk model of human thermal regulation but includes several signi/cant improvements, such as allowing an unlimited body segments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent developments in modeling heat transfer in blood perfused tissues

TL;DR: The present review compares and contrasts several of the new bio-heat transfer models, emphasizing the problematics of their experimental validation, in the absence of measuring equipment capable of reliable evaluation of tissue properties and their variations that occur in the spatial scale of blood vessels with diameters less than about 0.2 mm.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-dimensional finite-element analyses for radio-frequency hepatic tumor ablation

TL;DR: Three three-dimensional thermal-electrical FEM models consisting of a four-tine RF probe, hepatic tissue, and a large blood vessel located at different locations are constructed and a preliminary result from a simplified two-dimensional FEM model that includes a bifurcated blood vessel is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

A general bioheat transfer model based on the theory of porous media

TL;DR: In this article, a closed set of macroscopic governing equations for both velocity and temperature fields in intra-and extra-vascular phases has been established, for the first time, using the theory of anisotropic porous media.
Journal ArticleDOI

Large blood vessel cooling in heated tissues: a numerical study.

TL;DR: Reduction of the blood flow through thermally significant vessels was found to be the most effective way of reducing localized cooling.
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