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Journal ArticleDOI

Stokes flow in collapsible tubes: computation and experiment

Matthias Heil
- 25 Dec 1997 - 
- Vol. 353, Iss: 1, pp 285-312
TLDR
In this paper, the steady three-dimensional Stokes equations are used to analyse the slow viscous flow in an elastic tube whose deformation is described by geometrically nonlinear shell theory.
Abstract
This paper is concerned with the problem of viscous flow in an elastic tube. Elastic tubes collapse (buckle non-axisymmetrically) when the transmural pressure (internal minus external pressure) falls below a critical value. The tube's large deformation during the buckling leads to a strong interaction between the fluid and solid mechanics.In this study, the steady three-dimensional Stokes equations are used to analyse the slow viscous flow in such a tube whose deformation is described by geometrically nonlinear shell theory. Finite element methods are used to solve the large-displacement fluid–structure interaction problem. Typical wall deformations and flow fields in the strongly collapsed tube are shown. Extensive parameter studies illustrate the tube's flow characteristics (e.g. volume flux as a function of the applied pressure drop through the tube) for boundary conditions corresponding to the four fundamental experimental setups. It is shown that lubrication theory provides an excellent approximation of the fluid traction while being computationally much less expensive than the solution of the full Stokes equations. Finally, the computational predictions for the flow characteristics and the wall deformation are compared to the results obtained from an experiment.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biofluid mechanics in flexible tubes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review recent advances in understanding the fundamental mechanics of flexible-tube flows and discuss physiological applications spanning the cardiovascular system, respiratory system, and elsewhere in the body (involving active peristaltic transport driven by fluid structure/muscle interactions).
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Effect of membrane bending stiffness on the deformation of capsules in simple shear flow

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of interfacial bending stiffness on the deformation of liquid capsules enclosed by elastic membranes is discussed and investigated by numerical simulation, and a formulation in global Cartesian coordinates is developed.
Book ChapterDOI

A Monolithic FEM/Multigrid Solver for an ALE Formulation of Fluid-Structure Interaction with Applications in Biomechanics

TL;DR: A new method of solving the problem of fluid-structure interaction of an incompressible elastic object in laminar incompressable viscous flow is investigated based on a fully implicit, monolithic formulation of the problem in the arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian framework.
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Physiology of cerebral venous blood flow: from experimental data in animals to normal function in humans.

TL;DR: The authors have summarized the current knowledge of the physiology of the cerebrovenous system and discuss it is in the light of its clinical relevance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The deformation of flexible PDMS microchannels under a pressure driven flow.

TL;DR: A method for using fluorescence microscopy to quantify the deformation of Poly(dimethylsiloxane) microchannels under pressure driven flow is described and pressure drops and deformations closely correspond to values predicted by the model in most cases.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pressure-Flow Relationships in Collapsible Tubes

TL;DR: A collapsible tube is a flow-controlled nonlinear resistance, (QNLR) whose shape depends on external pressure and downstream circuit, and should apply to fluid conductors whose lumen significantly varies.
Journal ArticleDOI

A separated-flow model for collapsible-tube oscillations

TL;DR: In this paper, a model is presented to describe flow in segments of collapsible tube mounted between two rigid tubes and surrounded by a pressurized container, and the model predicts self-excited oscillations whose amplitude is large enough to be observable only if the flow in the collapsible tubes becomes supercritical.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flutter in flow-limited collapsible tubes: a mechanism for generation of wheezes.

TL;DR: It is concluded that viscid flutter in soft tubes is the more probable mechanism for the generation of oscillations in the soft tube model and is a possible mechanism forThe generation of respiratory wheezes.
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