Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow

The purpose of this thesis is to design a physical microchannel model for micro-Couette blood flow that provides constant and controlled conditions to study and analyze Red Blood Cell (RBC) aggregation. The innovation of this work is that the Couette blood flow is created by the motion of a second f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mehri, Rym
Other Authors: Mavriplis, Catherine
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/22916
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5847
id ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-22916
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-229162018-01-05T19:01:16Z Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow Mehri, Rym Mavriplis, Catherine Fenech, Marianne micro-Couette red blood cell aggregation blood microchannel The purpose of this thesis is to design a physical microchannel model for micro-Couette blood flow that provides constant and controlled conditions to study and analyze Red Blood Cell (RBC) aggregation. The innovation of this work is that the Couette blood flow is created by the motion of a second fluid with different properties, thereby entraining the blood. The experimental work is coupled with three-dimensional numerical simulations performed using a research Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) Solver, Nek5000, based on the spectral element method, while the experiments are conducted using a micro Particle Image Velocimetry (μPIV) system with a double frame CCD camera and an inverted laser imaging microscope. The design of the channel (150 × 33 μm and 170 × 64 μm microchannels) is based on several parameters determined numerically, such as the velocity and viscosity ratios and the degree of miscibility between the fluids, and the resulting configurations are fabricated in the laboratory using standard photolithography methods. The microchannel designed numerically is then tested experimentally, first, with a Newtonian fluid (glycerol), then with RBC suspensions to be compared to the simulations results. It was found that, numerically, using a velocity ratio of 4 between the two fluids, a third of the channel thickness corresponds to the blood layer. Within that range, it can be concluded, that the velocity profile of the blood layer is approximately linear as confirmed by experimental tests, resulting in the desired profile to study RBC aggregation in controlled conditions. The effect of several parameters, such as the hematocrit and the shear rate, on the RBC aggregates and the velocity profile is investigated, through experiments on the RBC suspensions. The final goal of this research is to ensure the compatibility of the results between the experiments and the Newtonian numerical model for several ranges of shear rate with the future intention of finding an accurate method to be able to quantitatively analyze aggregates and determine the number of RBC in each aggregate depending on the flow conditions (the shear rate). 2012-06-22T14:39:19Z 2012-06-22T14:39:19Z 2012 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/22916 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5847 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic micro-Couette
red blood cell aggregation
blood
microchannel
spellingShingle micro-Couette
red blood cell aggregation
blood
microchannel
Mehri, Rym
Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow
description The purpose of this thesis is to design a physical microchannel model for micro-Couette blood flow that provides constant and controlled conditions to study and analyze Red Blood Cell (RBC) aggregation. The innovation of this work is that the Couette blood flow is created by the motion of a second fluid with different properties, thereby entraining the blood. The experimental work is coupled with three-dimensional numerical simulations performed using a research Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) Solver, Nek5000, based on the spectral element method, while the experiments are conducted using a micro Particle Image Velocimetry (μPIV) system with a double frame CCD camera and an inverted laser imaging microscope. The design of the channel (150 × 33 μm and 170 × 64 μm microchannels) is based on several parameters determined numerically, such as the velocity and viscosity ratios and the degree of miscibility between the fluids, and the resulting configurations are fabricated in the laboratory using standard photolithography methods. The microchannel designed numerically is then tested experimentally, first, with a Newtonian fluid (glycerol), then with RBC suspensions to be compared to the simulations results. It was found that, numerically, using a velocity ratio of 4 between the two fluids, a third of the channel thickness corresponds to the blood layer. Within that range, it can be concluded, that the velocity profile of the blood layer is approximately linear as confirmed by experimental tests, resulting in the desired profile to study RBC aggregation in controlled conditions. The effect of several parameters, such as the hematocrit and the shear rate, on the RBC aggregates and the velocity profile is investigated, through experiments on the RBC suspensions. The final goal of this research is to ensure the compatibility of the results between the experiments and the Newtonian numerical model for several ranges of shear rate with the future intention of finding an accurate method to be able to quantitatively analyze aggregates and determine the number of RBC in each aggregate depending on the flow conditions (the shear rate).
author2 Mavriplis, Catherine
author_facet Mavriplis, Catherine
Mehri, Rym
author Mehri, Rym
author_sort Mehri, Rym
title Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow
title_short Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow
title_full Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow
title_fullStr Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow
title_full_unstemmed Micro PIV and Numerical Investigation of a Micro-Couette Blood Flow
title_sort micro piv and numerical investigation of a micro-couette blood flow
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/22916
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-5847
work_keys_str_mv AT mehrirym micropivandnumericalinvestigationofamicrocouettebloodflow
_version_ 1718597548836388864