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Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling

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Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling. / Pajic-Lijakovic, Ivana; Milivojevic, Milan; McClintock, Peter V. E.
In: Journal of Biological Engineering, 24.02.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

Harvard

Pajic-Lijakovic, I, Milivojevic, M & McClintock, PVE 2024, 'Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling', Journal of Biological Engineering.

APA

Pajic-Lijakovic, I., Milivojevic, M., & McClintock, P. V. E. (in press). Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling. Journal of Biological Engineering.

Vancouver

Pajic-Lijakovic I, Milivojevic M, McClintock PVE. Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling. Journal of Biological Engineering. 2024 Feb 24.

Author

Pajic-Lijakovic, Ivana ; Milivojevic, Milan ; McClintock, Peter V. E. / Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling. In: Journal of Biological Engineering. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{854b7ad9cbac4d839b75e5475b6ae06a,
title = "Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling",
abstract = "Inertial effects caused by perturbations of dynamical equilibrium during the flow of soft matter constitute a hallmark of turbulence. Such perturbations are attributable to an imbalance between energy storage and energy dissipation. During the flow of Newtonian fluids, kinetic energy can be both stored and dissipated, while the flow of viscoelastic soft matter systems, such as polymer fluids, induces the accumulation of both kinetic and elastic energies. The accumulation of elastic energy causes local stiffening of stretched polymer chains, which can destabilise the flow. Migrating multicellular systems are hugely complex and are capable of self-regulating their viscoelasticity and mechanical stress generation, as well as controlling their energy storage and energy dissipation. Since the flow perturbation of viscoelastic systems is caused by the inhomogeneous accumulation of elastic energy, rather than of kinetic energy, turbulence can occur at low Reynolds numbers. This theoretical review is focused on clarifying the role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence. Three types of system are considered and compared: (1) high-Reynolds turbulent flow of Newtonian fluids, (2) low and moderate-Reynolds flow of polymer solutions, and (3) migration of epithelial collectives, discussed in terms of two model systems. The models considered involve the fusion of two epithelial aggregates, and the free expansion of epithelial monolayers on a substrate matrix.",
author = "Ivana Pajic-Lijakovic and Milan Milivojevic and McClintock, {Peter V. E.}",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
day = "24",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Biological Engineering",
issn = "1754-1611",
publisher = "BMC",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence: Considerations for modelling

AU - Pajic-Lijakovic, Ivana

AU - Milivojevic, Milan

AU - McClintock, Peter V. E.

PY - 2024/2/24

Y1 - 2024/2/24

N2 - Inertial effects caused by perturbations of dynamical equilibrium during the flow of soft matter constitute a hallmark of turbulence. Such perturbations are attributable to an imbalance between energy storage and energy dissipation. During the flow of Newtonian fluids, kinetic energy can be both stored and dissipated, while the flow of viscoelastic soft matter systems, such as polymer fluids, induces the accumulation of both kinetic and elastic energies. The accumulation of elastic energy causes local stiffening of stretched polymer chains, which can destabilise the flow. Migrating multicellular systems are hugely complex and are capable of self-regulating their viscoelasticity and mechanical stress generation, as well as controlling their energy storage and energy dissipation. Since the flow perturbation of viscoelastic systems is caused by the inhomogeneous accumulation of elastic energy, rather than of kinetic energy, turbulence can occur at low Reynolds numbers. This theoretical review is focused on clarifying the role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence. Three types of system are considered and compared: (1) high-Reynolds turbulent flow of Newtonian fluids, (2) low and moderate-Reynolds flow of polymer solutions, and (3) migration of epithelial collectives, discussed in terms of two model systems. The models considered involve the fusion of two epithelial aggregates, and the free expansion of epithelial monolayers on a substrate matrix.

AB - Inertial effects caused by perturbations of dynamical equilibrium during the flow of soft matter constitute a hallmark of turbulence. Such perturbations are attributable to an imbalance between energy storage and energy dissipation. During the flow of Newtonian fluids, kinetic energy can be both stored and dissipated, while the flow of viscoelastic soft matter systems, such as polymer fluids, induces the accumulation of both kinetic and elastic energies. The accumulation of elastic energy causes local stiffening of stretched polymer chains, which can destabilise the flow. Migrating multicellular systems are hugely complex and are capable of self-regulating their viscoelasticity and mechanical stress generation, as well as controlling their energy storage and energy dissipation. Since the flow perturbation of viscoelastic systems is caused by the inhomogeneous accumulation of elastic energy, rather than of kinetic energy, turbulence can occur at low Reynolds numbers. This theoretical review is focused on clarifying the role of viscoelasticity in the appearance of low-Reynolds turbulence. Three types of system are considered and compared: (1) high-Reynolds turbulent flow of Newtonian fluids, (2) low and moderate-Reynolds flow of polymer solutions, and (3) migration of epithelial collectives, discussed in terms of two model systems. The models considered involve the fusion of two epithelial aggregates, and the free expansion of epithelial monolayers on a substrate matrix.

M3 - Review article

JO - Journal of Biological Engineering

JF - Journal of Biological Engineering

SN - 1754-1611

ER -