Abstract
This study presents an extensive numerical investigation on the flow phenomena of a blood analogous fluid through an axisymmetric stenosed artery under both steady and pulsatile flow conditions. Most of the previous investigations, carried out for this benchmark problem, used either a simple Newtonian fluid model or a generalized Newtonian (GNF) fluid model like the power-law or Bingham plastic fluid model to represent the rheological behaviour of blood. However, many prior rheological studies showed that the real and whole blood exhibits both the shear-thinning and viscoelastic properties. In this study, for the first time, a multi-mode sPTT (simplified Phan-Thein-Tanner) model is used to carry out the numerical computation, which accounts for both the shear-thinning and viscoelastic rheological properties of blood. Additionally, a realistic set of viscoelastic model parameters, obtained by fitting the response of real and whole blood in standard viscometric flows, is used in this study. An excellent agreement is seen between the experimentally determined apparent viscosity (in simple shear flows) of blood with that predicted by the present viscoelastic model and other prior models developed for blood. Therefore, we believe that this study presents more accurate and realistic numerical results for the flow of blood through a stenosed artery than that presented by the previous studies in the literature. A simple Newtonian fluid model is also used in the present analysis to compare and show how the flow behavior of blood can be influenced by its complex rheological properties under otherwise identical conditions. We find a significant difference in the flow characteristics (in terms of the streamline profiles, velocity magnitude, pressure drop, etc.) obtained with the Newtonian and viscoelastic fluid models. For instance, the velocity gradient is seen to be large near the artery wall for the viscoelastic fluid model than that seen for the Newtonian model; whereas, a reverse trend is seen for the pressure drop across the stenosis. Furthermore, we find that the flow dynamics is strongly modulated by the stenosis geometry, Reynolds number and flow types, i.e., whether it is steady or pulsatile.
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