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Examining flow dynamics of platelet function in micro-contractions using micro-PIV

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 10:31 authored by Farzan Akbaridoust, Chamindra De Silva, Rose Brazilek, Xiao Chen, Francisco Tovar LopezFrancisco Tovar Lopez, E. Poon, Andrew Ooi, Arnan MitchellArnan Mitchell, Harshal Nandurkar, Warwick Nesbitt, Ivan Marusic
This study examines the flow field in the near-vicinity of microcontraction-expansion geometries in microfluidic devices designed to specifically examine the impact of flow acceleration on platelet function. To this end, a set of Micron-resolution Particle Image Velocimetry (micro-PIV) measurements is conducted under a specific set of shear flow gradient conditions with both Newtonian (water) and non-Newtonian (blood analog solutions) fluids. These experiments are complemented by numerical simulations and a set of measurements at matched conditions using blood platelets labelled with DiOC6 (1µg/mL), introduced into the citrated human whole blood. Preliminary results reveal a good agreement between the experiments and numerical simulations at matched flow conditions. However, the experiments with blood analog solutions appear to exhibit different flow patterns both downstream and upstream of the micro-contractions. Furthermore, comparisons between the micro-PIV and blood flow experiments reveal that platelet aggregation appears to coincide with regions of high strain rate and wall shear stress. Collectively, these findings provide a better understanding of the appropriate simplifications that can be made in numerical and experimental work and provides a platform for future works to better understand the impact of flow acceleration on platelet activation.

History

Start page

1

End page

4

Total pages

4

Outlet

Proceedings of the 21st Australasian Fluid Mechanics Conference (AFMC 2018)

Editors

T. C.W. Lau and R.M. Kelso

Name of conference

AFMC 2018

Publisher

Australasian Fluid Mechanics Society

Place published

Western Australia, Australia

Start date

2018-12-10

End date

2018-12-13

Language

English

Copyright

© 2018 Australasian Fluids Mechanics Society (AFMS)

Former Identifier

2006093084

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-08-22

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