Medical Engineering & Physics
Volume 30, Issue 1 , Pages 91-103, January 2008

Three-phase CFD analytical modeling of blood flow

  • Jonghwun Jung

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: Argonne National Laboratory, Mathematics and Computer Science Division, Building 308, 9700 South Cass Avenue, Argonne, IL 60439, USA. Tel.: +1 630 252 6298; fax: +1 630 252 3250.
  • ,
  • Ahmed Hassanein

Mathematics and Computer Science Division, Argonne National Laboratory, 9700 S. Cass Avenue, Argonne, IL 60439, USA

Received 28 July 2006; received in revised form 20 November 2006; accepted 9 December 2006. published online 23 January 2007.

Abstract 

The behavior of blood cells in disturbed flow regions of arteries has significant relevance for understanding atherogenesis. However, their distribution with red blood cells (RBCs) and leukocytes is not so well studied and understood. Our three-phase computational fluid dynamics approach including plasma, RBCs, and leukocytes was used to numerically simulate the local hemodynamics in such a flow regime. This model has tracked the wall shear stress (WSS), phase distributions, and flow patterns for each phase in a concentrated suspension shear flow of blood. Unlike other computational approaches, this approach does not require dispersion coefficients as an input. The non-Newtonian viscosity model was applied to a wide physiological range of hematocrits, including low shear rates. The migration and segregation of blood cells in disturbed flow regions were computed, and the results compared favorably with available experimental data. The predicted higher leukocyte concentration was correlated with relatively low WSS near the stenosis having a high WSS. This behavior was attributed to flow-dependent interactions of the leukocytes with RBCs in pulsatile flow. This three-phase hemodynamic analysis may have application to vulnerable plaque formation in arteries with in vivo complex flow conditions.

Keywords: Three-phase flow, Wall shear stress, Non-Newtonian, Plaque formation, Hemodynamic interaction, Shear flow

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PII: S1350-4533(06)00264-5

doi:10.1016/j.medengphy.2006.12.004

Medical Engineering & Physics
Volume 30, Issue 1 , Pages 91-103, January 2008