A109 Investigation of Blood Vessel Wall Model in a Fluid Structure Interaction Analysis

Author(s):  
Toshimitu MAEKAWA ◽  
Hiroshi FUKUNARI ◽  
Takeshi UNEMURA ◽  
Marie OSHIMA
Author(s):  
Kiyoshi Kumahata ◽  
Masahiro Watanabe ◽  
Teruo Matsuzawa

We have used the voxel-based method to examine the Fluid-Structure Interaction (FSI) of blood flow and blood vessel wall. This method uses the voxel data that are Cartesian structured grid from medical image. We have confirmed the accuracy and reliability of this method for blood vessel. In this paper, we introduce backgrounds, kinetic models of blood vessel, a numerical method, and a result of experiment.


2013 ◽  
Vol 135 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdalla Mohamed AlAmiri

The current numerical investigation tackles the fluid-structure interaction in a blood vessel subjected to a prescribed heating scheme on tumor tissues under thermal therapy. A pulsating incompressible laminar blood flow was employed to examine its impact on the flow and temperature distribution within the blood vessel. In addition, the arterial wall was modeled using the volume-averaged porous media theory. The motion of a continuous and deformable arterial wall can be described by a continuous displacement field resulting from blood pressure acting on the tissue. Moreover, discretization of the transport equations was achieved using a finite element scheme based on the Galerkin method of weighted residuals. The numerical results were validated by comparing them against documented studies in the literature. Three various heating schemes were considered: constant temperature, constant wall flux, and a step-wise heat flux. The first two uniform schemes were found to exhibit large temperature variation within the tumor, which might affect the surrounding healthy tissues. Meanwhile, larger vessels and flexible arterial wall models render higher variation of the temperature within the treated tumor, owing to the enhanced mixing in the vicinity of the bottom wall.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Zhou-Bowers ◽  
D. C. Rizos

Reduced 3D dynamic fluid-structure interaction (FSI) models are proposed in this paper based on a direct time-domain B-spline boundary element method (BEM). These models are used to simulate the motion of rigid bodies in infinite or semi-infinite fluid media in real, or near real, time. B-spline impulse response function (BIRF) techniques are used within the BEM framework to compute the response of the hydrodynamic system to transient forces. Higher-order spatial and temporal discretization is used in developing the kinematic FSI model of rigid bodies and computing its BIRFs. Hydrodynamic effects on the massless rigid body generated by an arbitrary transient acceleration of the body are computed by a mere superposition of BIRFs. Finally, the dynamic models of rigid bodies including inertia effects are generated by introducing the kinematic interaction model to the governing equation of motion and solve for the response in a time-marching scheme. Verification examples are presented and demonstrate the stability, accuracy, and efficiency of the proposed technique.


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