Flow Flashcards

1
Q

What is volume flow rate?

Formula.

A

volume of the fluid that flows through a cross-section of the tube in time

IV = ΔV/Δt
or
IV = (A*Δl)/Δt = A * v

  • ΔV = volume of the fluid
  • Δt = time
  • A = cross-sectional area
  • Δl = average displace of the fluid
  • v = average speed
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2
Q

What is stationary flow?

A

parameters of the flow (e.g. velocity of the flow, pressure) constant at every place of the flow

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3
Q

What does the continuity equation state?

Formula.

A

in stationary flow of an incompressible fluid the volume flow rate is the same at any point along the tube
⇒ if narrower cross-section → fluid flows faster

IV = A1 * v1 = A2 * v2 = const.

  • A = cross-sectional area of the tube
  • v = average speed at the given cross-section
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4
Q

What is viscosity?

It depends on … ?

Unit?

A

internal friction of fluids and gases
larger for fluids that flow less easily → more viscous

ƞ in [Pa*s]

depends on:

  • material
  • temperature
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5
Q

When is a fluid referred to as Newtonian?

Give an example.

A

if the viscosity ƞ does not depend on:

  • Δv: velocity change
  • Δp: pressure drop

→ water

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6
Q

What is laminar flow?

When can it be observed?

A

at low flow velocities the fluid flows “in layers”

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7
Q

How does the speed of the different layers in case of laminar flow vary?

Why?

A

parabolical decrease in speed of layers due to internal friction (= drag force) as they are approaching the wall

vmax in center of the tube (can be turbulent)

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8
Q

What is turbulent flow?

When can it be observed?

Formula.

A

above a critical velocity v<strong>crit</strong> the flow becomes swirling irregularly

vcrit = Re * ƞ/(⍴*r)

  • Re = Reynolds number = 1160
  • ƞ = viscosity
  • ⍴ = density
  • r = radius of tube
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9
Q

Explain the clinical relevance of turbulent flow.

A

vturb < vlam volume flow rate decreases → greater demand on heart

  • if raorta decreased → vcrit increases, v increases even more (due to continuity equation) → turbulent flow
  • blood pressure measurement is based on listening to turbulent flow
  • pathological decrease of ƞ (incr. hematocrit) may cause turbulent flow
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10
Q

What does Hagen-Poiseuille law state?

It is valid for which kind of fluids?

A

describes stationary laminar flow of Newtonian fluids in rigid tubes

IV = ΔV/Δt = πr4Δp / 8ƞl

⇒ volume flow rate IV is directly proportional to the pressure drop that maintains the flow and 4th power of r

  • ƞ = viscosity
  • l = length of tube
  • r = radius of tube
  • Δp = static pressure drop along the tube
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11
Q

The resistance to flow is directly and inversely proportional to … ?

Formula.

A

Rflow = Rtube = (8*l*ƞ) / (π*r4) ~ (l*ƞ)/A2

directly proportional to:

  • l = length of the tube
  • ƞ = viscosity of the fluid

inversely proportional to:

  • r4 = A2 = fourth power of the radius of the tube = square of the cross-sectional area

(REMEMBER: inversely proportional to IV, <em>cf. Hagen-Poiseuille law)</em>

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12
Q

Explain how

  • no. of branches
  • average diameter
  • total cross-sectional area
  • average velocity
  • blood pressure

of the different types of blood vessels behaves in relation to each other.

A
  • no. of branches: increasing as diameter decreases
  • average diameter: decreases
  • total cross-sectional area: largest for capillaries since they are the most abundant type of blood vessels
  • blood pressure: highest in aorta, then decreasing
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13
Q

Can blood be considered as a Newtonian or non-Newtonian fluid?

A

non-Newtonian bc:

  • flow is pulsed, thus not stationary
  • walls of blood vessels are not rigid, but elastic
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