Login / Signup

Flow-induced "waltzing" red blood cells: Microstructural reorganization and the corresponding rheological response.

Chih-Tang LiaoAn-Jun LiuYeng-Long Chen
Published in: Science advances (2022)
We investigate flow-induced structural organization in a dilute suspension of tumbling red blood cells (RBCs) under confined shear flow. For small Reynolds ( Re = 0.1) and capillary numbers ( Ca ), with fully coupled hydrodynamic interaction (HI) and without interparticle adhesion, we find that HI between the biconcave discoid particles prompts the formation of layered RBC chains and synchronized rotating RBC pairs, referred here as "waltzing doublets." As the volume fraction ϕ increases, more waltzing doublets appear in RBC files. Stronger shear stress disrupts structural arrangements at higher Ca . We find that the flow-induced organization of waltzing doublets changes how the suspension viscosity varies with ϕ qualitatively. The intrinsic viscosity is particularly sensitive to microstructural rearrangement, increasing (decreasing) with ϕ at low (high) Ca that correlates with the change in the fraction of doublets. We verified flow-induced collective motion with comparison to two-cell simulations in which the cell volume fraction is controlled by varying the domain volume.
Keyphrases
  • red blood cell
  • high glucose
  • diabetic rats
  • endothelial cells
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • oxidative stress
  • multiple sclerosis
  • molecular dynamics
  • bone marrow
  • cystic fibrosis
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • biofilm formation