Publication | Open Access
Spheres in the vicinity of a bifurcation: elucidating the Zweifach–Fung effect
100
Citations
71
References
2011
Year
EngineeringFluid MechanicsBiomedical EngineeringPorous MediaRheologyChaotic MixingMicrofluidicsBiophysicsVolume FractionPhysicsChaos TheoryDisperse FlowBifurcation TheoryMultiphase FlowInlet BranchBiomedical FlowApplied PhysicsBlood Flow StudiesZweifach–fung Effect
The problem of the splitting of a suspension in bifurcating channels divided into two branches of non-equal flow rates is addressed. As has long been observed, in particular in blood flow studies, the volume fraction of particles generally increases in the high-flow-rate branch and decreases in the low-flow-rate branch. In the literature, this phenomenon is sometimes interpreted as the result of some attraction of the particles towards this high-flow-rate branch. In this paper, we focus on the existence of such an attraction through microfluidic experiments and two-dimensional simulations and show clearly that such an attraction does not occur but is, on the contrary, directed towards the low-flow-rate branch. Arguments for this attraction are given and a discussion on the sometimes misleading arguments found in the literature is given. Finally, the enrichment of particles in the high-flow-rate branch is shown to be mainly a consequence of the initial distribution in the inlet branch, which shows necessarily some depletion near the walls.
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