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COBE
Cardiovascular and CD-adapco recently teamed together
to simulate flow through COBE Cardiovascular’s
centrifugal blood pump, the Revolution. These efforts
were used to identify potential problems and to aid
future designs.
Common problems possible with blood pumps are hemolysis
and/or thrombus formation. High shear stress and a
tortuous flow path are two conditions that can cause
hemolysis. Thrombus formation is a complex function
ofphysiological conditions, biocompatibility of blood-contacting
surfaces, and the fluid dynamic characteristics of
blood flow within a flow domain. Generally, thrombus
formation occurs in regions of high shear stress, turbulence
and/or poor blood biocompatibility followed by exposure
to regions of re-circulation (i.e. vortices) and/or
stagnation.
Flow through the Revolution was modeled assuming Newtonian
behavior. Although blood is a non-Newtonian fluid,
under certain circumstances its flow behavior can be
approximated by a Newtonian model (e.g. flow with high
Reynolds number such as flow through arteries). Figure
1 displays the boundary and inlet conditions.
A 3-D, transient, moving mesh analysis was used to
calculate the flow field. The inside of the pump rotates
while the body of the pump remains stationary. Figure
2 shows the meshed flow domain for the pump. For this
analysis, the solver ran on six parallel Linux processors
for approximately 30 days, yielding a resolved, transiently
cyclic solution.
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