scholarly journals Inlet and Outlet Boundary Conditions and Uncertainty Quantification in Volumetric Lattice Boltzmann Method for Image-Based Computational Hemodynamics

Fluids ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 30
Author(s):  
Huidan Yu ◽  
Monsurul Khan ◽  
Hao Wu ◽  
Chunze Zhang ◽  
Xiaoping Du ◽  
...  

Inlet and outlet boundary conditions (BCs) play an important role in newly emerged image-based computational hemodynamics for blood flows in human arteries anatomically extracted from medical images. We developed physiological inlet and outlet BCs based on patients’ medical data and integrated them into the volumetric lattice Boltzmann method. The inlet BC is a pulsatile paraboloidal velocity profile, which fits the real arterial shape, constructed from the Doppler velocity waveform. The BC of each outlet is a pulsatile pressure calculated from the three-element Windkessel model, in which three physiological parameters are tuned by the corresponding Doppler velocity waveform. Both velocity and pressure BCs are introduced into the lattice Boltzmann equations through Guo’s non-equilibrium extrapolation scheme. Meanwhile, we performed uncertainty quantification for the impact of uncertainties on the computation results. An application study was conducted for six human aortorenal arterial systems. The computed pressure waveforms have good agreement with the medical measurement data. A systematic uncertainty quantification analysis demonstrates the reliability of the computed pressure with associated uncertainties in the Windkessel model. With the developed physiological BCs, the image-based computation hemodynamics is expected to provide a computation potential for the noninvasive evaluation of hemodynamic abnormalities in diseased human vessels.

1999 ◽  
Vol 10 (06) ◽  
pp. 1003-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
GONGWEN PENG ◽  
HAOWEN XI ◽  
SO-HSIANG CHOU

Boundary conditions in a recently-proposed finite volume lattice Boltzmann method are discussed. Numerical simulations for simple shear flow indicate that the extrapolation and the half-covolume techniques for the boundary conditions are workable in conjunction with the finite volume lattice Boltzmann method for arbitrary meshes.


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