Author:
COMER J. K.,KLEINSTREUER C.,ZHANG Z.
Abstract
The understanding and quantitative assessment of air flow fields and local micron-particle wall concentrations in tracheobronchial airways are very important for estimating
the health risks of inhaled particulate pollutants, developing algebraic transfer
functions of global lung deposition models used in dose-response analyses, and/or
determining proper drug-aerosol delivery to target sites in the lung. In this paper (Part
1) the theory, model geometries, and air flow results are provided. In a companion
paper (Part 2, Comer et al. 2001), the history of particle deposition patterns and
comparisons with measured data sets are reported. Decoupling of the naturally dilute
particle suspension makes it feasible to present the results in two parts.Considering a Reynolds number range of 500 [les ] ReD [les ] 2000, it is assumed that
the air flow is steady, incompressible and laminar and that the tubular double bifurcations,
i.e. Weibel's generations G3–G5, are three-dimensional, rigid, and smooth
with rounded as well as sharp carinal ridges for symmetric planar, and just rounded
carinas for 90° non-planar configurations. The employed finite-volume code CFX
(AEA Technology) and its user-enhanced FORTRAN programs were validated with
experimental velocity data points for a single bifurcation. The resulting air flow
structures are analysed for relatively low (ReD = 500) and high
(ReD = 2000) Reynolds
numbers. Sequential pressure drops due to viscous effects were calculated and compared,
extending a method proposed by Pedley et al. (1977). Such detailed results for
bifurcating lung airways are most useful in the development of global algebraic lung
models.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
159 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献