The propagation of air fingers into an elastic branching network
ORAL
Abstract
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. At higher levels of initial collapse, 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, which is governed by the change in the relative importance of viscous and elastic forces.
*The work was funded by the EPSRC [Grant No. EP/R045364/1]. H.L. would like to thank the China Scholarship Council for supporting him; F.B. would like to acknowledge the Royal Society (Grant No. URF/R1/211730).
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Publication: The propagation of air fingers into an elastic branching network (submitted to Physical Review Fluids)
Presenters
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Haolin Li
- Univ of Manchester