论文标题
气手指传播到弹性分支网络中
The propagation of air fingers into an elastic branching network
论文作者
论文摘要
我们通过弹性,充满液体的Hele-shaw通道的y分离来实验研究气道的Y-分类,作为气道重新开放的台式模型。借助弹性上边界提供的通道合规性,我们可以施加折叠的通道配置,并向空气注入恒定体积升值。我们通常会观察到主通道中稳定的手指传播,该通道在Y型 - 分类之前丢失,但随后在女儿通道中恢复。在低水平的初始崩溃时,尽管Y通道的不同部分的初始崩溃差异很小,但女儿通道中的稳定手指形状和气泡压力映射到了主通道中的那些。但是,在较高水平的初始塌陷中,弹性板几乎接触通道的底部边界,主通道中实验上难以区分的手指可能会导致多个重新打开子通道的状态。由于调节手指传播的力学的过渡,在女儿通道中回收稳定传播的下游距离也随注射流量和初始塌陷而变化很大。我们发现,该恢复的特征时间和长度尺度在该制度中最大,在低流速和/或低初始塌陷时粘性和表面张力占主导地位,并且它们朝着在极限达到极限的恒定高原下,弹性和表面张力在高流量和/或高初始塌陷处平衡。我们的发现表明,实用网络不太可能包含足够长的渠道以保持稳态传播以保持建立。
We study experimentally the propagation of an air finger through the Y-bifurcation of an elastic, liquid-filled Hele-Shaw channel, as a benchtop model of airway reopening. With channel compliance provided by an elastic upper boundary, we can impose collapsed channel configurations into which we inject air with constant volume-flux. We typically observe steady finger propagation in the main channel, which is lost ahead of the Y-bifurcation but subsequently recovered in the daughter channels. At low levels of initial collapse, steady finger shapes and bubble pressure in the daughter channels map onto those in the main channel, despite small differences in initial collapse in different parts of the Y-channel. However, at higher levels of initial collapse where the elastic sheet almost touches the bottom boundary of the channel, experimentally indistinguishable fingers in the main channel can lead to multiple states of reopening of the daughter channels. The downstream distance at which steady propagation is recovered in the daughter channels also varies considerably with injection flow rate and initial collapse because of a transition in the mechanics regulating finger propagation. We find that the characteristic time and length-scales of this recovery are largest in the regime where viscous and surface tension forces dominate at low flow rate and/or low initial collapse, and that they decrease towards a constant plateau reached in the limit where elastic and surface tension forces balance at high flow rate and/or high initial collapse. Our findings suggest that practical networks are unlikely to comprise long enough channels for steady state propagation to remain established.