An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes

A hydraulic collapse mechanism was incorporated into a recirculating pulsatile flow system to simulate the physiologic problem cf coronary artery vasospasm. A dimensional analysis of the hemodynamic problem provided the basis for i) the specifications for elastic test sections (both straight and bra...

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Main Author: Davis, Roy Benjamin
Other Authors: Engineering Mechanics
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76051
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-760512020-09-29T05:33:46Z An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes Davis, Roy Benjamin Engineering Mechanics LD5655.V856 1983.D385 Coronary arteries -- Models Biomedical engineering Flow visualization A hydraulic collapse mechanism was incorporated into a recirculating pulsatile flow system to simulate the physiologic problem cf coronary artery vasospasm. A dimensional analysis of the hemodynamic problem provided the basis for i) the specifications for elastic test sections (both straight and branching), ii) the determination of the flow modelling parameters, Reynolds number and unsteady Reynolds number, and iii) the determination of the dimensionless collapse parameters. The models were collapsed in a controlled manner while changes in volumetric flow rate into and out of the models as well as axial pressure drop were monitored. It was found that the driven collapse of the vessel acts as a pump, the effectiveness of which is dependent on upstream and downstream resistance. There was noted a difference in the volumetric flow curves representing fluid leaving the pre- and the post-collapse models under the same inflow conditions. This was due to both the elastic properties of the models and to the post-collapse shape of the models (curved walls and non-circular cross-section). Time-exposed photographs of tracer particle displacements within the model indicate increased volumetric flow in each branch during the initial phase of the collapse process. Moreover, it was seen that the radial gradient of the axial velocity at each wall surface varied in magnitude (and possibly in sign) during the collapse. The in vitro results do not substantiate the coronary spasm/myocardial ischemia connection, but do further implicate vasospasm as a factor in atherogenesis. Ph. D. 2017-03-10T15:14:56Z 2017-03-10T15:14:56Z 1983 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76051 en_US OCLC# 10762325 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xiv, 177 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1983.D385
Coronary arteries -- Models
Biomedical engineering
Flow visualization
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1983.D385
Coronary arteries -- Models
Biomedical engineering
Flow visualization
Davis, Roy Benjamin
An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
description A hydraulic collapse mechanism was incorporated into a recirculating pulsatile flow system to simulate the physiologic problem cf coronary artery vasospasm. A dimensional analysis of the hemodynamic problem provided the basis for i) the specifications for elastic test sections (both straight and branching), ii) the determination of the flow modelling parameters, Reynolds number and unsteady Reynolds number, and iii) the determination of the dimensionless collapse parameters. The models were collapsed in a controlled manner while changes in volumetric flow rate into and out of the models as well as axial pressure drop were monitored. It was found that the driven collapse of the vessel acts as a pump, the effectiveness of which is dependent on upstream and downstream resistance. There was noted a difference in the volumetric flow curves representing fluid leaving the pre- and the post-collapse models under the same inflow conditions. This was due to both the elastic properties of the models and to the post-collapse shape of the models (curved walls and non-circular cross-section). Time-exposed photographs of tracer particle displacements within the model indicate increased volumetric flow in each branch during the initial phase of the collapse process. Moreover, it was seen that the radial gradient of the axial velocity at each wall surface varied in magnitude (and possibly in sign) during the collapse. The in vitro results do not substantiate the coronary spasm/myocardial ischemia connection, but do further implicate vasospasm as a factor in atherogenesis. === Ph. D.
author2 Engineering Mechanics
author_facet Engineering Mechanics
Davis, Roy Benjamin
author Davis, Roy Benjamin
author_sort Davis, Roy Benjamin
title An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
title_short An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
title_full An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
title_fullStr An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
title_full_unstemmed An examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
title_sort examination of flow characteristics in collapsing elastic tubes
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/76051
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