Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/10950
Title: Local viscosity distribution in bifurcating microfluidic blood flows
Authors: Kaliviotis, Efstathios 
Sherwood, Joseph M. 
Balabani, Stavroula 
Major Field of Science: Medical and Health Sciences
Field Category: Clinical Medicine
Keywords: Bifurcation (mathematics);Blood;Blood pressure;Cells;Constitutive equations;Hemodynamics;Microchannels;Microfluidics
Issue Date: 1-Mar-2018
Source: Physics of Fluids, 2018, vol. 30, no. 3
Volume: 30
Issue: 3
Journal: Physics of Fluids 
Abstract: The red blood cell (RBC) aggregation phenomenon is majorly responsible for the non-Newtonian nature of blood, influencing the blood flow characteristics in the microvasculature. Of considerable interest is the behaviour of the fluid at the bifurcating regions. In vitro experiments, using microchannels, have shown that RBC aggregation, at certain flow conditions, affects the bluntness and skewness of the velocity profile, the local RBC concentration, and the cell-depleted layer at the channel walls. In addition, the developed RBC aggregates appear unevenly distributed in the outlets of these channels depending on their spatial distribution in the feeding branch, and on the flow conditions in the outlet branches. In the present work, constitutive equations of blood viscosity, from earlier work of the authors, are applied to flows in a T-type bifurcating microchannel to examine the local viscosity characteristics. Viscosity maps are derived for various flow distributions in the outlet branches of the channel, and the location of maximum viscosity magnitude is obtained. The viscosity does not appear significantly elevated in the branches of lower flow rate as would be expected on the basis of the low shear therein, and the maximum magnitude appears in the vicinity of the junction, and towards the side of the outlet branch with the higher flow rate. The study demonstrates that in the branches of lower flow rate, the local viscosity is also low, helping us to explain why the effects of physiological red blood cell aggregation have no adverse effects in terms of in vivo vascular resistance.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14279/10950
ISSN: 10706631
DOI: 10.1063/1.5011373
Rights: © Author(s)
Type: Article
Affiliation : Cyprus University of Technology 
University College London 
Imperial College London 
Appears in Collections:Άρθρα/Articles

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