72nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics
Volume 64, Number 13
Saturday–Tuesday, November 23–26, 2019;
Seattle, Washington
Session R04: Andreas Acrivos Dissertation Award in Fluid Dynamics talk: The Development and Application of a Computational Method for Modeling Cellular-Scale Blood Flow in Complex Geometry
9:46 AM–10:06 AM,
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Room: 6e
Chair: Arezoo Ardekani, Purdue University
Abstract: R04.00001 : The Development and Application of a Computational Method for Modeling Cellular-Scale Blood Flow in Complex Geometry.
9:46 AM–10:06 AM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Peter Balogh
(Duke University)
In the human body, blood flows through highly complex geometries. It
circulates throughout the body via networks of winding vessels that
continually bifurcate into smaller vessels, and merge to form larger
vessels. The smallest vessels have diameters on the order of the size of the
individual blood cells, and interconnected networks of such vessels, known
as microvascular networks, are critical to the healthy functioning of the
circulatory system. In terms of the hydrodynamics of blood flow therein,
both cellular-scale details as well as the complexity of the geometry are
important to accurately capture what occurs in physiology. In the first part
of this talk I will detail the development of a robust, high-fidelity direct
numerical simulation method for modeling 3D cellular-scale blood through
large-scale complex geometries. The approach utilizes immersed boundary
methods (IBMs) in the context of a finite volume/spectral fluid flow solver.
A continuous forcing front-tracking IBM is used to model the large
deformation of individual cells, while a sharp-interface ghost node IBM is
used to model complex stationary geometries as well as flowing rigid bodies
of arbitrary shape. Validations will be presented establishing the accuracy
of the method, followed by a brief demonstration of its capabilities. In the
second part of this talk I will discuss the application of the method to
study red blood cells (RBCs) flowing through physiologically realistic
microvascular networks. Using data from the simulations, a number of topics
related to microvascular blood flow have been studied, and an overview of
novel findings unique to cellular-scale flows in complex vessel networks
will be provided. This will include both general hydrodynamical
observations, as well as more specific topics such as how RBCs distribute
through multiple bifurcations in sequence, the three-dimensionality of the
near-wall RBC-free region, and the influence of RBCs on 3D wall shear stress
patterns.