Ascending aorta simulations provide insight into patient-specific hemodynamic conditions. Numerous studies have assessed fluid biomarkers which show a potential to aid clinicians in the diagnosis process. Unfortunately, there exists a large disparity in the computational methodology used to model turbulence and viscosity. Recognizing this disparity, some authors focused on analysing the influence of either the turbulence or viscosity models on the biomarkers in order to quantify the importance of these model choices. However, no analysis has yet been done on their combined effect. In order to fully understand and quantify the effect of the computational methodology, an assessment of the combined effect of turbulence and viscosity model choice was performed. Our results show that (1) non-Newtonian viscosity has greater impact (2.9-5.0%) on wall shear stress than Large Eddy Simulation turbulence modelling (0.1-1.4%), (2) the contribution of non-Newtonian viscosity is amplified when combined with a subgrid-scale turbulence model, (3) wall shear stress is underestimated when considering Newtonian viscosity by 2.9-5.0% and (4) cycle-to-cycle variability can impact the results as much as the numerical model if insufficient cycles are performed. These results demonstrate that, when assessing the effect of computational methodologies, the resultant combined effect of the different modelling assumptions differs from the aggregated effect of the isolated modifications. Accurate aortic flow modelling requires non-Newtonian viscosity and Large Eddy Simulation turbulence modelling.

Martínez, A., Hoeijmakers, M., Geronzi, L., Morgenthaler, V., Tomasi, J., Rochette, M., et al. (2023). Effect of turbulence and viscosity models on wall shear stress derived biomarkers for aorta simulations. COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 167 [10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.107603].

Effect of turbulence and viscosity models on wall shear stress derived biomarkers for aorta simulations

Geronzi L.;Biancolini M. E.
2023-01-01

Abstract

Ascending aorta simulations provide insight into patient-specific hemodynamic conditions. Numerous studies have assessed fluid biomarkers which show a potential to aid clinicians in the diagnosis process. Unfortunately, there exists a large disparity in the computational methodology used to model turbulence and viscosity. Recognizing this disparity, some authors focused on analysing the influence of either the turbulence or viscosity models on the biomarkers in order to quantify the importance of these model choices. However, no analysis has yet been done on their combined effect. In order to fully understand and quantify the effect of the computational methodology, an assessment of the combined effect of turbulence and viscosity model choice was performed. Our results show that (1) non-Newtonian viscosity has greater impact (2.9-5.0%) on wall shear stress than Large Eddy Simulation turbulence modelling (0.1-1.4%), (2) the contribution of non-Newtonian viscosity is amplified when combined with a subgrid-scale turbulence model, (3) wall shear stress is underestimated when considering Newtonian viscosity by 2.9-5.0% and (4) cycle-to-cycle variability can impact the results as much as the numerical model if insufficient cycles are performed. These results demonstrate that, when assessing the effect of computational methodologies, the resultant combined effect of the different modelling assumptions differs from the aggregated effect of the isolated modifications. Accurate aortic flow modelling requires non-Newtonian viscosity and Large Eddy Simulation turbulence modelling.
2023
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore ING-IND/14
English
Ascending aorta
Dynamic Smagorinsky–Lilly
LES
Non-Newtonian
Turbulence model
Viscosity
Wall shear stress
Martínez, A., Hoeijmakers, M., Geronzi, L., Morgenthaler, V., Tomasi, J., Rochette, M., et al. (2023). Effect of turbulence and viscosity models on wall shear stress derived biomarkers for aorta simulations. COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 167 [10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.107603].
Martínez, A; Hoeijmakers, M; Geronzi, L; Morgenthaler, V; Tomasi, J; Rochette, M; Biancolini, Me
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/350224
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