Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows
Blood flows in microcirculation are determined by the mechanical properties of blood samples, which have been used to screen the status or progress of diseases. To achieve this, it is necessary to measure the viscoelasticity of blood samples under a pulsatile blood condition. In this study, viscoela...
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doaj-8e729d80109642f987397f8d33532e042020-11-25T02:16:11ZengMDPI AGMicromachines2072-666X2020-02-0111324510.3390/mi11030245mi11030245Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood FlowsYang Jun Kang0Department of Mechanical Engineering, Chosun University, 309 Pilmun-daero, Dong-gu, Gwangju 61452, KoreaBlood flows in microcirculation are determined by the mechanical properties of blood samples, which have been used to screen the status or progress of diseases. To achieve this, it is necessary to measure the viscoelasticity of blood samples under a pulsatile blood condition. In this study, viscoelasticity measurement is demonstrated by quantifying interface variations in coflowing streams. To demonstrate the present method, a T-shaped microfluidic device is designed to have two inlets (a, b), one outlet (a), two guiding channels (blood sample channel, reference fluid channel), and one coflowing channel. Two syringe pumps are employed to infuse a blood sample at a sinusoidal flow rate. The reference fluid is supplied at a constant flow rate. Using a discrete fluidic circuit model, a first-order linear differential equation for the interface is derived by including two approximate factors (<i>F<sub>1</sub></i> = 1.094, <i>F<sub>2</sub></i> = 1.1087). The viscosity and compliance are derived analytically as viscoelasticity. The experimental results showed that compliance is influenced substantially by the period. The hematocrit and diluent contributed to the varying viscosity and compliance. The viscoelasticity varied substantially for red blood cells fixed with higher concentrations of glutaraldehyde solution. The experimental results showed that the present method has the ability to monitor the viscoelasticity of blood samples under a sinusoidal flow-rate pattern.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/11/3/245viscoelasticitymicrofluidic devicecoflowing streamsinterfacelinear differential equationtwo approximate factors |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Yang Jun Kang |
spellingShingle |
Yang Jun Kang Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows Micromachines viscoelasticity microfluidic device coflowing streams interface linear differential equation two approximate factors |
author_facet |
Yang Jun Kang |
author_sort |
Yang Jun Kang |
title |
Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows |
title_short |
Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows |
title_full |
Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows |
title_fullStr |
Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows |
title_full_unstemmed |
Blood Viscoelasticity Measurement Using Interface Variations in Coflowing Streams under Pulsatile Blood Flows |
title_sort |
blood viscoelasticity measurement using interface variations in coflowing streams under pulsatile blood flows |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Micromachines |
issn |
2072-666X |
publishDate |
2020-02-01 |
description |
Blood flows in microcirculation are determined by the mechanical properties of blood samples, which have been used to screen the status or progress of diseases. To achieve this, it is necessary to measure the viscoelasticity of blood samples under a pulsatile blood condition. In this study, viscoelasticity measurement is demonstrated by quantifying interface variations in coflowing streams. To demonstrate the present method, a T-shaped microfluidic device is designed to have two inlets (a, b), one outlet (a), two guiding channels (blood sample channel, reference fluid channel), and one coflowing channel. Two syringe pumps are employed to infuse a blood sample at a sinusoidal flow rate. The reference fluid is supplied at a constant flow rate. Using a discrete fluidic circuit model, a first-order linear differential equation for the interface is derived by including two approximate factors (<i>F<sub>1</sub></i> = 1.094, <i>F<sub>2</sub></i> = 1.1087). The viscosity and compliance are derived analytically as viscoelasticity. The experimental results showed that compliance is influenced substantially by the period. The hematocrit and diluent contributed to the varying viscosity and compliance. The viscoelasticity varied substantially for red blood cells fixed with higher concentrations of glutaraldehyde solution. The experimental results showed that the present method has the ability to monitor the viscoelasticity of blood samples under a sinusoidal flow-rate pattern. |
topic |
viscoelasticity microfluidic device coflowing streams interface linear differential equation two approximate factors |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-666X/11/3/245 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT yangjunkang bloodviscoelasticitymeasurementusinginterfacevariationsincoflowingstreamsunderpulsatilebloodflows |
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