A LATTICE BOLTZMANN STUDY ON THE LARGE DEFORMATION OF RED BLOOD CELLS IN SHEAR FLOW

2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (06) ◽  
pp. 993-1011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. SUI ◽  
Y. T. CHEW ◽  
H. T. LOW

The transient deformation of a liquid-filled elastic capsule, simulating a red blood cell, was studied in simple shear flow. The simulation is based on a hybrid method which introduces the immersed boundary concept in the framework of the multi-block lattice Boltzmann model. The method was validated by the study on deformation of an initially circular capsule with Hooke's membrane. Also studied were capsules with Skalak membrane of initially elliptical and biconcave shapes, which are more representative of a red blood cell. Membrane tank treading motion is observed. As the ratio between membrane dilation modulus and shear modulus increases, the capsule shows asymptotic behavior. For an initially elliptical capsule, it is found that the steady shape is independent of initial inclination angle. For an initially biconcave capsule, the tank treading frequency from two-dimensional modeling is comparable to that of real cells. Another interesting finding is that the tank treading velocity has not attained steady state when the capsule shape becomes steady; and at this state there is the internal vortex pair. The treading velocity continues to decrease and reaches a steady value when the internal vortex pair has developed into a single vortex.

Author(s):  
Toshihiro OMORI ◽  
Takuji ISHIKAWA ◽  
Yohsuke IMAI ◽  
Takami YAMAGUCHI

Author(s):  
Toshihiro OMORI ◽  
Takuji ISHIKAWA ◽  
Dominique BARTHES-BIESEL ◽  
Yohsuke IMAI ◽  
Takami YAMAGUCHI

Author(s):  
Toshihiro OMORI ◽  
Takuji ISHIKAWA ◽  
Dominique BARTHES-BIESEL ◽  
Yohsuke IMAI ◽  
Takami YAMAGUCHI

2016 ◽  
Vol 138 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Hashemi ◽  
M. Rahnama ◽  
S. Jafari

In this paper, an attempt has been made to study sedimentation of a red blood cell (RBC) in a plasma-filled tube numerically. Such behaviors are studied for a healthy and a defective cell which might be created due to human diseases, such as diabetes, sickle-cell anemia, and hereditary spherocytosis. Flow-induced deformation of RBC is obtained using finite-element method (FEM), while flow and fluid–membrane interaction are handled using lattice Boltzmann (LB) and immersed boundary methods (IBMs), respectively. The effects of RBC properties as well as its geometry and orientation on its sedimentation rate are investigated and discussed. The results show that decreasing frontal area of an RBC and/or increasing tube diameter results in a faster settling. Comparison of healthy and diabetic cells reveals that less cell deformability leads to slower settling. The simulation results show that the sicklelike and spherelike RBCs have lower settling velocity as compared with a biconcave discoid cell.


2009 ◽  
Vol 618 ◽  
pp. 13-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROBERT M. MacMECCAN ◽  
J. R. CLAUSEN ◽  
G. P. NEITZEL ◽  
C. K. AIDUN

A novel method is developed to simulate suspensions of deformable particles by coupling the lattice-Boltzmann method (LBM) for the fluid phase to a linear finite-element analysis (FEA) describing particle deformation. The methodology addresses the need for an efficient method to simulate large numbers of three-dimensional and deformable particles at high volume fraction in order to capture suspension rheology, microstructure, and self-diffusion in a variety of applications. The robustness and accuracy of the LBM–FEA method is demonstrated by simulating an inflating thin-walled sphere, a deformable spherical capsule in shear flow, a settling sphere in a confined channel, two approaching spheres, spheres in shear flow, and red blood cell deformation in flow chambers. Additionally, simulations of suspensions of hundreds of biconcave red blood cells at 40% volume fraction produce continuum-scale physics and accurately predict suspension viscosity and the shear-thinning behaviour of blood. Simulations of fluid-filled spherical capsules which have red-blood-cell membrane properties also display deformation-induced shear-thinning behaviour at 40% volume fraction, although the suspension viscosity is significantly lower than blood.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document