A boundary integral method with volume-changing objects for ultrasound-triggered margination of microbubbles
Achim Guckenberger, Stephan Gekle

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel boundary integral method to simulate volume-changing microbubbles in 3D suspensions and demonstrates their ultrasound-triggered margination for targeted drug delivery.
Contribution
The work develops a new boundary integral approach that accounts for volume-changing objects and proves its mathematical well-posedness, extending existing methods.
Findings
Microbubbles can be manipulated to marginate near vessel walls using ultrasound.
The proposed method rigorously includes volume flux in boundary integral equations.
Ultrasound-triggered microbubbles exhibit robust margination behavior.
Abstract
A variety of numerical methods exist for the study of deformable particles in dense suspensions. None of the standard tools, however, currently include volume-changing objects such as oscillating microbubbles in three-dimensional periodic domains. In the first part of this work, we develop a novel method to include such entities based on the boundary integral method. We show that the well-known boundary integral equation must be amended with two additional terms containing the volume flux through the bubble surface. We rigorously prove the existence and uniqueness of the solution. Our proof contains as a subset the simpler boundary integral equation without volume-changing objects (such as red blood cell or capsule suspensions) which is widely used but for which a formal proof in periodic domains has not been published to date. In the second part, we apply our method to study…
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