Abstract

Computational blood flow studies are providing an increasingly important complement to clinical experiments in 21st century biomedical engineering. Motivated by probing deeper into this topic, a theoretical and numerical study is presented of the flow induced by an impulsive acceleration to steady state hemodynamics in a curved tube which is investigated as a boundary layer developing with time from the curved entrance to a straight tube (blood vessel). The transient processes are simulated with a finite volume method solution of the Navier–Stokes equations. The rapid growth of the boundary layer with the core flow is captured in the curved entrance, along the tube to an axisymmetric flow in the downstream. Secondary flow patterns, centrifugal pressures and total head contours are correlated with longitudinal velocity distributions across various sections. It is observed that the entrance zone is controlled by uniform inlet velocity and centrifugal forces. The high pressure drop in the onset flow is associated with strong acceleration which is comparable to generating systolic pressures. The simulations further indicate that a sustained increment in volumetric flow rate is necessary to maintain the pressure wave in the aorta. Furthermore, the velocity distributions are shown to approach Hagen–Poiseuille flow in the downstream zone. The complex hemodynamic characteristics are visualized effectively with computational simulations and the study demonstrates the excellent ability of this approach in elaborating critical flow details in aortic hemodynamics.

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