Author:
GHADIALI SAMIR N.,GAVER DONALD P.
Abstract
We have utilized a computational model of semi-infinite air bubble progression in a
surfactant-doped, fluid-filled rigid capillary to investigate the continual interfacial
expansion dynamics that occur during the opening of collapsed pulmonary airways. This model
simulates mixed-kinetic conditions with nonlinear surfactant equations of state similar to
those of pulmonary surfactant. Several dimensionless parameters govern the system responses:
the capillary number (Ca) that relates viscous to surface tension forces; the elasticity
number (El), a measure of the ability of surfactant to modify the surface tension; the
bulk Péclet number (Pe), relating bulk convection rates to diffusion rates;
the adsorption and desorption Stanton numbers (Sta and
Std) that relate the adsorption/desorption rates to
surface convective rates; and finally the adsorption depth (λ), a dimensionless
bulk surfactant concentration parameter. We investigated this model by performing detailed
parameter variation studies at fixed and variable equilibrium concentrations. We find that
the surfactant properties can strongly influence the interfacial pressure drop through
modification of the surface tension and the creation of Marangoni stresses that influence
the viscous stresses along the interface. In addition, these studies demonstrate that,
depending upon the range of parameters, either film thickening or film thinning responses
are possible. In particular, we find that when Pe[Gt ]1 (as with pulmonary surfactant)
or when sorption rates are low, concentration profiles can substantially differ from near-equilibrium
approximations and can result in film thinning. These responses may influence stresses on
epithelial cells that line pulmonary airways and the stability of these airways, and may be
important to the delivery of exogenous surfactant to deep regions of the lung.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
74 articles.
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