4.7 Article

A boundary element model of microbubble sticking and sliding in the microcirculation

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER
Volume 51, Issue 23-24, Pages 5700-5711

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2008.04.050

Keywords

Gas embolotherapy; Stokes flow; Bubble dynamics; Contact angle hysteresis

Funding

  1. NIH [R01EB006476, EB003541]
  2. NSF [BES-0301278]
  3. Whitaker Foundation [RG-03-0017]

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A pressure driven 2D channel flow at very low Reynolds numbers (Stokes flow) with a bubble sticking and sliding along one of the walls is studied computationally using the boundary element method (BEM). The moving three phase contact lines are modeled using a Tanner law wherein the contact line speed is linearly proportional to the deviation of the contact angle from its equilibrium value. Results are presented with and without the effect of contact angle hysteresis. Including contact angle hysteresis allows us to predict the stick-slide behavior of bubbles, which in turn affects the long term evolution and dynamics of the bubbles. It is shown that the initial rapid contraction or expansion of the bubbles to achieve local equilibrium with the surrounding pressure field results in cusps and bulges in the wall normal stress profiles. The wall shear stress also increases (with opposite signs upstream and downstream of the bubble) as the fluid rushes in or out of the channel inlet and outlet. In the long term, bubbles slowly expand as they slide along the channel wall. Contact lines are found to correspond to peaks in the wall normal and shear stress profiles at all times. The effectiveness of bubbles in occluding flow through the channel is also examined. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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