scholarly journals 430 Development of An Arterial Tree, 3D Computational Mechanical Model for A Multi-Scale Circulatory Simulator

Author(s):  
Tomooku KOYAMA ◽  
Ryutaro HIMENO ◽  
Hao LIU
2006 ◽  
Vol 2006.6 (0) ◽  
pp. 51-52
Author(s):  
Tomooku KOYAMA ◽  
Kuniharu OKA ◽  
FUYOU Liang ◽  
Hideo YOKOTA ◽  
Ryutaro HIMENO ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 104602
Author(s):  
Hui-Juan Guo ◽  
Ying-Hua Liu ◽  
Yi-Nao Su ◽  
Quan-Li Zhang ◽  
Guo-Dong Zhan

Author(s):  
A. Elhomani ◽  
K. Farhang

In applications involving substantial friction, surface failure is an inevitable phenomenon. Friction induced failure typically involves the generation of considerable heat. Existence of significant frictional force leads to relatively high interface temperature as a result of dynamic nature of flash temperatures at the contact areas. A first step in predicting friction induced failure is to develop an accurate thermo-mechanical model of the friction system. A 3D thermo-mechanical model is developed in this paper based on a lumped parameter representation of a two-disk brake. A disk is viewed as consisting of three main regions, (1) the surface contact, (2) the friction interface, and (3) the bulk. The 3D lumped parameter model is obtained by dividing a disk into a number of sub-sectors, adjacent sectors, and stacked layers. The friction layer contains both the interface and contact elements, each include the equivalent thermal capacitance and conductive resistance. The contact capacitance and resistance are described in terms of the elastic contact interaction between the surfaces of the two disks. Therefore they are obtained using the Greenwood and Williamson model for contact of rough surfaces. Each is described as a statistical summation of the micron-scale interaction of the surfaces.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Nestor-Bergmann ◽  
Guy Blanchard ◽  
Nathan Hervieux ◽  
Alexander George Fletcher ◽  
Jocelyn Etienne ◽  
...  

Cell intercalation is a key cell behaviour of morphogenesis and wound healing, where local cell neighbour exchanges can cause dramatic tissue deformations such as body axis extension. Here, we develop a mechanical model to understand active cell intercalation behaviours in the context of an epithelial tissue. Extending existing descriptions, such as vertex models, the junctional actomyosin cortex of every cell is modelled as a continuum morphoelastic rod, explicitly representing cortices facing each other at bicellular junctions. Cells are described directly in terms of the key subcellular constituents that drive dynamics, with localised stresses from the contractile actomyosin cortex and adhesion molecules coupling apposed cortices. This multi-scale apposed-cortex formulation reveals key behaviours that drive tissue dynamics, such as cell-cell shearing and flow of junctional material past cell vertices. We show that cell neighbour exchanges can be driven by purely junctional mechanisms. Active contractility and viscous turnover in a single bicellular junction are sufficient to shrink and remove a junction. Next, the 4-way vertex is resolved and a new, orthogonal junction extends passively. The adhesion timescale defines a frictional viscosity that is an important regulator of these dynamics, modulating tension transmission in the tissue as well as the speeds of junction shrinkage and growth. The model additionally predicts that rosettes, which form when a vertex becomes common to many cells, are likely to occur in active tissues with high adhesive friction.


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