The effect of Dean, Reynolds and Womersley numbers on the flow in a spherical cavity on a curved round pipe. Part 1. Fluid mechanics in the cavity as a canonical flow representing intracranial aneurysms

Flow in sidewall cerebral aneurysms can be ideally modelled as the combination of flow over a spherical cavity and flow in a curved circular pipe, two canonical flows. Flow in a curved pipe is known to depend on the Dean number $De$, combining the effects of Reynolds number $\textit {Re}$ and of the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of fluid mechanics 2021-03, Vol.915, Article A123
Hauptverfasser: Chassagne, Fanette, Barbour, Michael C., Chivukula, Venkat K., Machicoane, Nathanael, Kim, Louis J., Levitt, Michael R., Aliseda, Alberto
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container_title Journal of fluid mechanics
container_volume 915
creator Chassagne, Fanette
Barbour, Michael C.
Chivukula, Venkat K.
Machicoane, Nathanael
Kim, Louis J.
Levitt, Michael R.
Aliseda, Alberto
description Flow in sidewall cerebral aneurysms can be ideally modelled as the combination of flow over a spherical cavity and flow in a curved circular pipe, two canonical flows. Flow in a curved pipe is known to depend on the Dean number $De$, combining the effects of Reynolds number $\textit {Re}$ and of the curvature along the pipe centreline, $\kappa$. Pulsatility in the flow introduces a dependence on the Womersley number $Wo$. Using stereo particle image velocimetry measurements, this study investigated the effect of these three key non-dimensional parameters, by modifying pipe curvature ($De$), flow rate ($Re$) and pulsatility frequency ($Wo$), on the flow patterns in a spherical cavity. A single counter-rotating vortex was observed in the cavity for all values of pipe curvature $\kappa$ and Reynolds number $\textit {Re}$, for both steady and pulsatile inflow conditions. Increasing the pipe curvature impacted the flow patterns in both the pipe and the cavity, by shifting the velocity profile towards the cavity opening and increasing the flow rate in to the cavity. The circulation in the cavity was found to collapse well with only the Dean number, for both steady and pulsatile inflows. For pulsatile inflow, the counter-rotating vortex was unstable and the location of its centre over time was impacted by the curvature of the pipe, as well as $\textit {Re}$ and $Wo$ in the free stream. The circulation in the cavity was higher for steady inflow than for the equivalent average Reynolds number and Dean number pulsatile inflow, with very limited impact of the Womersley number in the range studied. A second part of this study, that focuses on the changes in fluid dynamics when the intracranial aneurysm is treated with a flow-diverting stent, can be found in this issue (Barbour et al., J. Fluid Mech., vol. 915, 2021, A124).
doi_str_mv 10.1017/jfm.2020.1114
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source Cambridge Journals
subjects Aneurysm
Aneurysms
Biomechanics
Computational fluid dynamics
Curvature
Flow distribution
Flow velocity
Fluid dynamics
Fluid flow
Fluid mechanics
Geometry
Hemodynamics
Hydrodynamics
Implants
Inflow
JFM Papers
Mechanics
Parameter modification
Particle image velocimetry
Physics
Physiology
Pipes
Reynolds number
Rotation
Stream flow
Velocity distribution
Velocity profiles
Vortices
title The effect of Dean, Reynolds and Womersley numbers on the flow in a spherical cavity on a curved round pipe. Part 1. Fluid mechanics in the cavity as a canonical flow representing intracranial aneurysms
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