Three-dimensional airway reopening: the steady propagation of a semi-infinite bubble into a buckled elastic tube
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4444023
DOI10.1017/S0022112002003452zbMath1037.76059MaRDI QIDQ4444023
Matthias Heil, Andrew L. Hazel
Publication date: 25 February 2004
Published in: Journal of Fluid Mechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)
finite element methodsurface tensionviscous fluidKirchhoff-Love shell theoryfree-surface Stokes equations
Fluid-solid interactions (including aero- and hydro-elasticity, porosity, etc.) (74F10) Finite element methods applied to problems in fluid mechanics (76M10) Liquid-gas two-phase flows, bubbly flows (76T10) Physiological flows (76Z05) Physiological flow (92C35)
Related Items
The influence of surfactant on the propagation of a semi-infinite bubble through a liquid-filled compliant channel, Anomalous bubble propagation in elastic tubes, The influence of gravity on the steady propagation of a semi-infinite bubble into a flexible channel, Liquid plug propagation in flexible microchannels: A small airway model, Time-dependent motion of a confined bubble in a tube: transition between two steady states, Modelling 3D semi-deformable tubes in real time, The pulsatile propagation of a finger of air within a fluid-occluded cylindrical tube, Reopening modes of a collapsed elasto-rigid channel, An efficient solver for the fully coupled solution of large-displacement fluid-structure interaction problems., Bubble transitions in strongly collapsed elastic tubes, Three-dimensional instabilities of liquid-lined elastic tubes: A thin-film fluid-structure interaction model, Equilibrium of a second-gradient fluid and an elastic solid with surface stresses, Surface-tension-induced buckling of liquid-lined elastic tubes: a model for pulmonary airway closure, Dynamics of front propagation in a compliant channel, A Matrix Free Fractional Step Method for Static and Dynamic Incompressible Solid Mechanics, Modelling finger propagation in elasto-rigid channels, Effects of surfactant on propagation and rupture of a liquid plug in a tube