Viscous flow in a soft valve
Keunhwan Park, Aude Tixier, Anneline Christensen, Sif, Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Maciej Zwieniecki, Kaare Jensen

TL;DR
This paper investigates the nonlinear viscous flow behavior in a bioinspired soft valve, combining experiments and theory to reveal how elastic and hydrodynamic forces interact at low Reynolds numbers, leading to pressure-dependent flow regulation.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified mathematical model for viscous flow in a soft valve, capturing the nonlinear pressure-flow relationship with experimental validation.
Findings
Flow rate initially increases with pressure but decreases after a critical point.
The pressure-flow relation follows a specific power-law dependence.
Experimental results agree with the theoretical model without adjustable parameters.
Abstract
Fluid-structure interactions are ubiquitous in nature and technology. However, the systems are often so complex that numerical simulations or ad hoc assumptions must be used to gain insight into the details of the complex interactions between the fluid and solid mechanics. In this paper, we present experiments and theory on viscous flow in a simple bioinspired soft valve which illustrate essential features of interactions between hydrodynamic and elastic forces at low Reynolds numbers. The setup comprises a sphere connected to a spring located inside a tapering cylindrical channel. The spring is aligned with the central axis of the channel and a pressure drop is applied across the sphere, thus forcing the liquid through the narrow gap between the sphere and the channel walls. The sphere's equilibrium position is determined by a balance between spring and hydrodynamic forces. Since the…
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