Fluid Vibration Induced by High-Shear-Rate Flow in a T-Junction

2016 ◽  
Vol 138 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaku Tanaka ◽  
Ryuhei Yamaguchi ◽  
Hao Liu ◽  
Toshiyuki Hayase

For laminar flow in the side branch of a T-junction, periodic fluid vibrations occur with the Strouhal number independent of characteristic flow conditions. As the mechanics is unknown, an experiment was performed to establish the underlying cause in high-shear-rate flow. The fluid vibration appears along both the shearing separation layer and the boundary between two vortices immediately downstream of the side branch, where the shear rates are several orders larger than those further downstream. This vibration is caused by flow instability induced in two types of high-shear-rate flow confirming that is a universal phenomenon associated with the geometry of the T-junction.

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 181-190
Author(s):  
Elif H Ozcan Cetin ◽  
Mehmet S Cetin ◽  
Mustafa B Ozbay ◽  
Hasan C Könte ◽  
Nezaket M Yaman ◽  
...  

Aim: We aimed to assess the association of whole blood with thromboembolic milieu in significant mitral stenosis patients. Methodology & results: We included 122 patients and classified patients into two groups as having thrombogenic milieu, thrombogenic milieu (+), otherwise patients without thrombogenic milieu, thrombogenic milieu (-). Whole blood viscosity (WBV) in both shear rates were higher in thrombogenic milieu (+) group comparing with thrombogenic milieu (-). WBV at high shear rate and WBV at low shear rate parameters were moderately correlated with grade of spontaneous echo contrast. Adjusted with other parameters, WBV parameters at both shear rates were associated with presence of thrombogenic milieu. Discussion & conclusion: We found that extrapolated WBV at both shear rates was significantly associated with the thrombogenic milieu in mitral stenosis. This easily available parameter may provide additional perspective about thrombogenic diathesis.


1989 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. B. Gupta ◽  
L. H. Ding ◽  
M. Y. Jaffrin

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 5191-5191
Author(s):  
Khon C. Huynh ◽  
Volker R. Stoldt ◽  
Marianna Gyenes ◽  
Rüdiger E. Scharf

Abstract Abstract 5191 Introduction: To fulfill their role in hemostasis, circulating platelets need to irreversibly adhere to the site of vascular injury and to resist to shear stress generated by the flowing blood. We previously reported that there is a relationship between the conformation of fibronectin (Fn) and its role in platelet adhesion and aggregation (Huynh, K. C. et al., ASH Annual Meeting Abstract, 2011. 118(21): p. 2209). In the present study, we examined the effect of shear stress on the assembly of Fn by adherent platelets. Moreover, we studied the role of β3 integrins (αIIbβ3 and αvβ3) in Fn assembly under flow conditions. Methods: Alexa fluor 488-conjugated fibronetin (Fn488) was added to suspensions of washed platelets (108/ml) in HEPES Tyrode buffer. CaCl2 (2 mM) and ADP (10 μM) were added immediately prior to the experiments. The samples (150 μl) were subsequently applied onto plates precoated with 50 μg/ml Fn. A DiaMed Impact-R device was used to generate shear rates of 500 s−1 or 5000 s−1 for 2 min or 10 min. Nonadherent platelets were removed by washing with PBS buffer followed by addition of 150 μl of 2 % DOC lysis buffer. Lysates were collected and total protein concentrations were determined by Bradford assay. The DOC-insoluble pellets containing Fn fibrils were isolated by centrifugation at 13, 500 rpm for 20 min. Pellets were then solubilized with 100 μl of 1 % SDS buffer. Equal amounts of samples based on total protein concentrations were loaded onto wells of 96-well microplates. Fluorescence signals from Fn488 of samples were recorded by a Fluoroskan microplate reader. In some experiments, abciximab (anti-β3, 10 μg/ml) or LM609 (anti-αvβ3, 5 μg/ml) antibody, were added to platelet mixtures before loading onto Fn precoated plates. All data were collected from at least three different experiments and analyzed using GraphPad Quickcals. To test for statistical differences, student's t-test was used. Results: Fn assembly by adherent platelets was strongly affected by the applied shear rate but not by the exposure time to shear. At a shear rate of 500 s−1, there were no insoluble Fn fibrils detectable in samples with adherent platelets after 2 or 10 min. When shear rates increased from 500 s−1 to 5000 s−1, the amount of insoluble Fn detectable on platelets after 2 and 10 min increased significantly (p < 0. 05) suggesting that adherent platelets exposed to high shear rates assemble more Fn fibrils on their surface. However, prolongation of exposure time to shear from 2 to 10 min did not result in significantly more Fn assembled by adherent platelets. By contrast, there were no insoluble fibrils that could be detected with adherent platelets under static conditions for 2 and 10 min. After 2 min at a shear rate of 5000 s−1, platelets blocked with abciximab showed a significant decrease in the amounts of insoluble Fn fibrils in comparison with control experiments (no antibody) (p = 0. 02). Similar inhibitory effects could be seen with platelets treated with LM609. In parallel experiments in which 10 min at 5000 s−1 were applied, both abciximab and LM609 had an inhibitory effect on Fn fibrillogenesis with a stronger effect by abciximab. Taken together, these data show that αvβ3 even at the low expression on platelets plays a major role in initiating the fibrillogenesis of Fn under high shear rate conditions, whereas αIIbβ3 contributes to the progression of Fn fibrils formation subsequently. Conclusion: Our observations document that the assembly of Fn on the surface of adherent platelets is strongly affected by shear rate conditions. In addition, our data imply that, despite its lower expression on platelet surface, αvβ3 provides a significant contribution in initiating the Fn assembly under high flow conditions, as compared with αIIbβ3. By contrast, αIIbβ3 with its abundant amount on the platelet surface probably exerts its effect in the later phase of Fn fibrillogenesis. The present findings support the contention that not a single integrin or Fn binding domain, but multiple interaction steps including different molecules and Fn domains may be involved in assembling Fn. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2011 ◽  
Vol 690 ◽  
pp. 226-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manickaraj Jeyakumar ◽  
Sumanth Shankar

The flow behavior and viscosity of pure aluminum, zinc and Zn-7wt%Al liquids were quantified with the effects of temperature and shear rate by rotational rheometry experiments. These systems exhibited a non-Newtonian, shear thinning and non-thixotropic flow behavior where in the liquid metal viscosity decreases with increasing shear rates. The temperature dependence of viscosity followed the Arrhenius equation. Moreover, at high shear rate regimes the flow resembles a nearly Newtonian behaviour.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Stefan Kuczera

<p>A flow phenomena called ‘shear banding’ is often observed for a certain class of complex fluids, namely wormlike micellar solutions. Wormlike micelles are elongated flexible self-assembly structures formed by the aggregation of amphiphiles, which may entangle into a dynamic network above a certain concentration threshold. The entanglement results in the sample having both solid-like (elastic) and liquid-like (viscous) properties, an ambiguity commonly found in complex fluids. Under certain shear conditions, the flow couples with the structure of the micellar network, leading to the formation of (shear) bands with differing viscosity.  The principle goal of this work is to address open questions regarding the temporal and spatial stability of shear banded flow. Shear banding is often studied in cylindrical Couette cells, where the fluid is sheared in a gap between differentially rotating concentric cylinders. For the sake of an accurate description of the flow in such a shear cell, the methodology for a 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) velocimetry technique (known as PGSE-RARE), which offers high temporal and spatial resolution, is improved and refined. Two main challenges are identified and overcome. The first concerns the fact that the velocity imaging process operates on a Cartesian grid, whereas the flow in the Couette cell is of cylindrical symmetry. Numerical calculations and NMR simulations based on the Bloch equations, as well as experimental evidence, give insight on the appropriate selection of the fluid volume over which velocity information is accumulated and the preferred scheme through which the NMR image is acquired in the so-called k-space. The small extent of the fluid gap for the cells in use is the second challenge. In this respect, a variant of the velocimetry technique is developed, which offers ultra high resolution in the gap direction, necessary for a detailed description of the flow profile in the banded state.  The refined methodology is applied in a thorough study of a certain wormlike micellar solution (‘10% CPCl’), which is known to exhibit spatiotemporal fluctuations and has been subject of numerous studies over the past 20 years. NMR results are supported by a recently developed 2D Rheo-USV (Ultrasonic Speckle Velocimetry) method, which offers an even higher temporal resolution. The two complementary methods show good agreement for averaged velocity profiles. In line with previous studies the fluid is found to follow a standard anomalous lever rule, which is characterized by a constant shear rate in the high viscosity band and a varying shear rate and proportion of the high shear rate band. In particular, the high resolution NMR variant allows a refined picture on the dynamics of the interface between the two bands. Furthermore, slip is observed for all investigated shear rates. The amount of slip, however, is found to strongly depend on the specifities of the Couette cells in use. Spatially and temporally resolved flow maps reveal various flow instabilities. Ultrasound measurements show vorticity structures in the order of the gap width. In the NMR case no such structures are observed due to the lower resolution in the axial direction. For higher shear rates the occurrence of turbulent bursts is detected for USV. No direct evidence of similar flow instabilities is found in the NMR case. Finally, broad distributions dominate the high shear rate band in temporally and spatially resolved velocity profiles, showing the fluctuative nature of the flow.</p>


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2199-2199
Author(s):  
Masaaki Doi ◽  
Mitsuhiko Sugimoto ◽  
Hideto Matsui ◽  
Tomoko Matsumoto ◽  
Midori Shima

Abstract Abstract 2199 Coagulation factor VIII (FVIII), lacking in hemophilic blood, plays an essential role in mechanisms of fibrin plug formation to arrest bleeding at sites of injured vessel walls. Physiologic activity of FVIII circulating in bloodstream (soluble FVIII; S-FVIII) could be extensively evaluated so far by classic plasma coagulation assays such as activated partial thromboplastin time. However, the in vivo functional relevance of FVIII bound to von Willebrand factor (VWF) which is immobilized in subendothelium (immobilized FVIII; I-FVIII) is more complex and remains to be addressed. Using an in vitro perfusion chamber system, we have therefore evaluated the function of I-FVIII in the process of mural thrombus generation under whole blood flow conditions. FVIII-free VWF was purified in the presence of 0.35 M CaCl2 from cryoprecipitate, and coated on a glass plate. Various concentrations (0 as a control, 0.1, 0.3, 1, or 3 U/ml) of recombinant FVIII (Kogenate FS provided by Bayer Pharmaceutical Co.) were reacted with the FVIII-free VWF-coated glass plate. After non-adherent proteins were washed out, the amount of FVIII immobilized to a glass surface via VWF (I-FVIII) was measured by ELISA-based assay using a peroxidase-conjugated anti-FVIII polyclonal antibody. Whole blood was then perfused over a glass plate described above in a parallel plate flow chamber with various shear rates, and the thrombus generation process on a glass surface was observed in real time by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The development of intra-thrombus fibrin deposition was assessed by immune-staining of thrombi with a fluorescence-labeled anti-fibrin specific monoclonal antibody (NYB-T2G1; Accurate Chem.), reflecting solid-phase blood coagulation reaction during mural thrombogenesis. In perfusion of control blood with a high shear rate (1500 s-1), the intra-thrombus fibrin deposition was found to increase as a function of I-FVIII, resulting in the 2.5-fold greater fibrin deposition at the plateau as compared to control thrombi generated in the absence of I-FVIII. This I-FVIII effect on intra-thrombus fibrin deposition was also confirmed in perfusion of synthetic hemophilic blood (S-FVIII activity < 1%) which was prepared by the incubation of control blood with an anti-FVIII human IgG (final inhibitor titer in synthetic blood; 5, 10, or 20 Bethesda U/ml). Indeed, I-FVIII normalized in a dose-dependent manner the reduced fibrin deposition (20-35% of normal control) within synthetic hemophilic thrombi generated in the absence of S-FVIII under a high shear rate condition. The improvement of impaired fibrin deposition by I-FVIII was unvarying regardless of the anti-FVIII inhibitor titer in synthetic hemophilic blood. In contrast, the direct addition of recombinant FVIII into synthetic hemophilic blood was poorly effective in this regard, due to the immediate neutralization of S-FVIII by an inhibitor involved in synthetic blood. Thus, these results clearly indicate that I-FVIII, independent of S-FVIII, does play a considerable role on the intra-thrombus fibrin-network formation in the process of mural thrombus generation under whole blood flow conditions with high shear rate, most relevant physiologically for the in vivo hemostasis and thrombosis. Our results might imply a possibility of novel strategic design targeting I-FVIII against hemophilic patients with a high titer anti-FVIII inhibitor. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Stefan Kuczera

<p>A flow phenomena called ‘shear banding’ is often observed for a certain class of complex fluids, namely wormlike micellar solutions. Wormlike micelles are elongated flexible self-assembly structures formed by the aggregation of amphiphiles, which may entangle into a dynamic network above a certain concentration threshold. The entanglement results in the sample having both solid-like (elastic) and liquid-like (viscous) properties, an ambiguity commonly found in complex fluids. Under certain shear conditions, the flow couples with the structure of the micellar network, leading to the formation of (shear) bands with differing viscosity.  The principle goal of this work is to address open questions regarding the temporal and spatial stability of shear banded flow. Shear banding is often studied in cylindrical Couette cells, where the fluid is sheared in a gap between differentially rotating concentric cylinders. For the sake of an accurate description of the flow in such a shear cell, the methodology for a 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) velocimetry technique (known as PGSE-RARE), which offers high temporal and spatial resolution, is improved and refined. Two main challenges are identified and overcome. The first concerns the fact that the velocity imaging process operates on a Cartesian grid, whereas the flow in the Couette cell is of cylindrical symmetry. Numerical calculations and NMR simulations based on the Bloch equations, as well as experimental evidence, give insight on the appropriate selection of the fluid volume over which velocity information is accumulated and the preferred scheme through which the NMR image is acquired in the so-called k-space. The small extent of the fluid gap for the cells in use is the second challenge. In this respect, a variant of the velocimetry technique is developed, which offers ultra high resolution in the gap direction, necessary for a detailed description of the flow profile in the banded state.  The refined methodology is applied in a thorough study of a certain wormlike micellar solution (‘10% CPCl’), which is known to exhibit spatiotemporal fluctuations and has been subject of numerous studies over the past 20 years. NMR results are supported by a recently developed 2D Rheo-USV (Ultrasonic Speckle Velocimetry) method, which offers an even higher temporal resolution. The two complementary methods show good agreement for averaged velocity profiles. In line with previous studies the fluid is found to follow a standard anomalous lever rule, which is characterized by a constant shear rate in the high viscosity band and a varying shear rate and proportion of the high shear rate band. In particular, the high resolution NMR variant allows a refined picture on the dynamics of the interface between the two bands. Furthermore, slip is observed for all investigated shear rates. The amount of slip, however, is found to strongly depend on the specifities of the Couette cells in use. Spatially and temporally resolved flow maps reveal various flow instabilities. Ultrasound measurements show vorticity structures in the order of the gap width. In the NMR case no such structures are observed due to the lower resolution in the axial direction. For higher shear rates the occurrence of turbulent bursts is detected for USV. No direct evidence of similar flow instabilities is found in the NMR case. Finally, broad distributions dominate the high shear rate band in temporally and spatially resolved velocity profiles, showing the fluctuative nature of the flow.</p>


2006 ◽  
Vol 72 (713) ◽  
pp. 75-80
Author(s):  
Ryuhei YAMAGUCHI ◽  
Johji SHIMANE ◽  
Syuichi SAITO ◽  
Norimichi HIRAOKA ◽  
Hisashi FUJII ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 3521-3521
Author(s):  
Yasunori Matsunari ◽  
Masaaki Doi ◽  
Hideto Matsui ◽  
Kenji Nishio ◽  
Hitoshi Furuya ◽  
...  

Abstract Mural thrombus formation at sites of damaged vessel wall, essential for both physiologic hemostasis and pathological thrombosis, is established by platelet adhesion/aggregation and blood coagulation mechanisms. Although tissue factor (TF) is up-regulated upon vessel wall damage and plays a pivotal role in the latter process, its functional relevance under physiologic blood flow conditions is poorly understood. Using an in vitro perfusion chamber system, we have therefore studied the relevant role of TF in thrombus formation mediated by von Willebrand factor (VWF), a distinctive flow-dependent thrombogenic surface, under whole blood flow conditions with varying shear rates. Human recombinant TF (Innobin) were co-coated with purified VWF (100 ug/ml) onto a glass plate to prepare ‘surface-immobilized TF/VWF complex’. Surface density of immobilized TF, evaluated by the ELISA-based assay using an anti-TF monoclonal antibody, was increased in a concentration-dependent and saturated manner by soluble TF (1-100 pM) added on a plate. Citrated whole blood, recalcified with 8 mM CaCl2 prior to perfusion, was perfused over a VWF-surface in the presence or absence of surface-immobilized TF. Platelet adhesion and aggregation was evaluated by the surface coverage of generated thrombi in a defined area after 5-min perfusion. Mural thrombi formed on VWF-surface were also double-stained with fluorescently labeled anti-fibrin and anti-fibrinogen antibodies. Fibrin generation was evaluated by confocal laser scanning microscopy as a ratio of fibrin relative to fibrinogen fluorescence within mural thrombi. As a result, surface-immobilized TF significantly augmented flow-dependent fibrin generation as a function of increasing surface density of TF under both low (250 s-1) and high (1500 s-1) shear rate conditions. In this regard, soluble TF, when added to sample blood, similarly increased intra-thrombus fibrin generation in a dose-dependent manner in the absence of immobilized TF. However, coagula formation in sample blood was enormously amplified by soluble TF during perfusion, as judged by the flow-path occlusion time. In addition to the enhancing effects on fibrin generation, immobilized TF significantly up-regulated VWF-dependent platelet adhesion and aggregation under high shear rate conditions, albeit with no appreciable effects under low shear rate conditions. These results suggest a synergistic functional link between immobilized TF and VWF in mural thrombus formation under high shear rate conditions. Our results clearly illustrate the thrombogenic potentials of two distinct forms (soluble or surface-immobilized) of TF, in which surface-immobilized TF plays a concerted role on VWF-dependent thrombus formation with lesser risk of systemic hypercoagulability which may be induced by circulating soluble TF under high shear rate conditions. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2009 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 81-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Berthet ◽  
H. Stone ◽  
F. Marty ◽  
B. Mercier ◽  
J. Jundt ◽  
...  

We present our efforts to design, manufacture, and characterize a capillary viscometer aimed at performing very high shear rate rheology of complex fluids, and fabricated using hybrid MEMS/microfluidic technology. We demonstrate that microfluidic and MEMS technologies can be combined to integrate fluidic channels with microfabricated stress and flow sensors, enabling rheological measurements at shear rates up to 500000s-1 and beyond.


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