2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(230aj) Time Evolution of Shear-Induced Particle Margination and Migration in a Cellular Suspension
In this talk, we investigate the time-dependent concentration distribution of red blood cells and platelets in pressure-driven flow by solving a Boltzmann model, advection-diffusion equation for both species. From a fluid mechanics point of view, deformability-induced hydrodynamic lift and shear-induced diffusion are essential mechanisms for the cross-flow particle migration and margination. The governing Boltzmann equation for red blood cells includes both lift flux away from the wall and shear-induced diffusion due to cell-cell â??collisionsâ?. On the other hand, the governing transport equation for platelets includes shear-induced diffusion from cell-platelet â??collisionsâ? and platelet-platelet â??collisionsâ?. We verify our model by, first, solving for the steady concentration profile of red blood cells and platelets, and demonstrating that these predictions are in good agreement with full boundary element simulation and experimental results. We then explore the time evolution and report entrance lengths for red blood cell migration and platelet margination. Our theory serves as a fast and computationally-efficient alternative to large-scale simulation.