Abstract

The magnitude of shear stress at the ciliated wall is considered as the measure of efficiency of cilia beatings as it describes the momentum transfer between the medium and the cilia. Under high shear rate, some non-Newtonian fluids behave as visco-inelastic fluids. We consider here a ciliated channel coated with Prandtl fluid, a visco-inelastic fluid, with Hartmann layer under momentum and thermal slip effects. The flow in the channel is produced due to beatings of cilia that obey an elliptic path of motion in the flow direction. An entropy analysis of the flow is also conducted in wave frame. After introducing lubrication approximations in the governing equation, the perturbation solutions are calculated. The data for pressure rise per metachronal wavelength and frictional force at the ciliated wall are obtained by numerical integration. The analysis reveals that the higher values of cilia length and velocity slip parameters support fluid flow near the channel wall surface. Fluid temperature is an increasing function of thermal slip but a decreasing function of cilia length and slip parameters. Entropy in the channel can be minimized with an increase in cilia length and slip effect at the boundary. The magnitude of the heat transfer coefficient decreases by taking the substantial slippage and tiny cilia in length at the microchannel wall.

Highlights

  • Cilia-aided movements are considered as an important factor for the locomotion of the cell itself or other substances past the cell surface

  • Inspired by the aforementioned bulk of the literature, the main purpose of this study is to investigate the entropy generation in magnetohydrodynamic cilia-driven transport of Prandtl fluid by imposing the momentum slip and temperature jump conditions at the ciliated wall of the channel

  • A complete thermodynamical analysis has been presented for a ciliated channel coated with a

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cilia-aided movements are considered as an important factor for the locomotion of the cell itself or other substances past the cell surface. Cilia are very tiny hair-resembling structures that develop from the outer surface of eukaryotic cells. Cilia coating in female fallopian tubes [4,5] carry the ova through oviducts, and in male efferent ductules [6] mix sperms to prevent them from accumulating and obstructing the tube so they can reach their final destination. They are found in brain, kidneys, ears and eye retina.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call