Shape transition and hydrodynamics of vesicles in tube flow
Paul G. Chen, J. M. Lyu, M. Jaeger, M. Leonetti

TL;DR
This study numerically investigates the shape transitions and hydrodynamic behavior of vesicles in tube flow, revealing how confinement and shape influence mobility and pressure drop, with implications for blood flow and suspension rheology.
Contribution
It introduces a phase diagram of vesicle shapes and analyzes the shape transition's impact on hydrodynamics under confinement conditions.
Findings
Identified a shape transition line between parachute and bullet shapes.
Showed that vesicle mobility changes significantly at the shape transition.
Provided detailed data on lubrication film thickness and pressure drops at high confinement.
Abstract
The steady motion and deformation of a lipid-bilayer vesicle translating through a circular tube in low Reynolds number pressure-driven flow are investigated numerically using an axisymmetric boundary element method. This fluid-structure interaction problem is determined by three dimensionless parameters: reduced volume (a measure of the vesicle asphericity), geometric confinement (the ratio of the vesicle effective radius to the tube radius), and capillary number (the ratio of viscous to bending forces). The physical constraints of a vesicle -- fixed surface area and enclosed volume when it is confined in a tube -- determine critical confinement beyond which it cannot pass through without rupturing its membrane. The simulated results are presented in a wide range of reduced volumes [0.6, 0.98] for different degrees of confinement; the reduced volume of 0.6 mimics red blood cells. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood properties and coagulation · Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Rheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies
