Medical Engineering & Physics
Volume 29, Issue 3 , Pages 350-366, April 2007

Effects of mesh style and grid convergence on particle deposition in bifurcating airway models with comparisons to experimental data

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Virginia Commonwealth University, 601 West Main Street, P.O. Box 843015, Richmond, VA 23284-3015, United States

Received 10 January 2006; received in revised form 11 May 2006; accepted 16 May 2006. published online 29 June 2006.

Abstract 

A number of research studies have employed a wide variety of mesh styles and levels of grid convergence to assess velocity fields and particle deposition patterns in models of branching biological systems. Generating structured meshes based on hexahedral elements requires significant time and effort; however, these meshes are often associated with high quality solutions. Unstructured meshes that employ tetrahedral elements can be constructed much faster but may increase levels of numerical diffusion, especially in tubular flow systems with a primary flow direction. The objective of this study is to better establish the effects of mesh generation techniques and grid convergence on velocity fields and particle deposition patterns in bifurcating respiratory models. In order to achieve this objective, four widely used mesh styles including structured hexahedral, unstructured tetrahedral, flow adaptive tetrahedral, and hybrid grids have been considered for two respiratory airway configurations. Initial particle conditions tested are based on the inlet velocity profile or the local inlet mass flow rate. Accuracy of the simulations has been assessed by comparisons to experimental in vitro data available in the literature for the steady-state velocity field in a single bifurcation model as well as the local particle deposition fraction in a double bifurcation model. Quantitative grid convergence was assessed based on a grid convergence index (GCI), which accounts for the degree of grid refinement. The hexahedral mesh was observed to have GCI values that were an order of magnitude below the unstructured tetrahedral mesh values for all resolutions considered. Moreover, the hexahedral mesh style provided GCI values of approximately 1% and reduced run times by a factor of 3. Based on comparisons to empirical data, it was shown that inlet particle seedings should be consistent with the local inlet mass flow rate. Furthermore, the mesh style was found to have an observable effect on cumulative particle depositions with the hexahedral solution most closely matching empirical results. Future studies are needed to assess other mesh generation options including various forms of the hybrid configuration and unstructured hexahedral meshes.

Keywords: Respiratory particle dynamics, Grid convergence index, Respiratory dosimetry, Bifurcation models, Lagrangian particle tracking

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PII: S1350-4533(06)00107-X

doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2006.05.012

Medical Engineering & Physics
Volume 29, Issue 3 , Pages 350-366, April 2007