Publication | Closed Access
B<scp>IOFLUID</scp> M<scp>ECHANICS IN</scp> F<scp>LEXIBLE</scp> T<scp>UBES</scp>
436
Citations
111
References
2003
Year
Flow ControlEngineeringFluid MechanicsBiomedical EngineeringBlood FlowWall DeformationBiomechanicsBiofluid DynamicBiophysicsCapillary NetworkMechanobiologyProgramming Language TheoryWave PropagationComputer ScienceMultiphase FlowBiomedical FlowPhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsFlow-induced InstabilitiesMedicineLinguistics
▪ Abstract Almost all vessels carrying fluids within the body are flexible, and interactions between an internal flow and wall deformation often underlie a vessel's biological function or dysfunction. Such interactions can involve a rich range of fluid-mechanical phenomena, including nonlinear pressure-drop/flow-rate relations, self-excited oscillations of single-phase flow at high Reynolds number and capillary-elastic instabilities of two-phase flow at low Reynolds number. We review recent advances in understanding the fundamental mechanics of flexible-tube flows, and discuss physiological applications spanning the cardiovascular system (involving wave propagation and flow-induced instabilities of blood vessels), the respiratory system (involving phonation, the closure and reopening of liquid-lined airways, and Marangoni flows on flexible surfaces), and elsewhere in the body (involving active peristaltic transport driven by fluid-structure/muscle interactions).
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