Devices for modern heart support are minimized to reduce priming blood volume and contact area with foreign surfaces. Their flow fields are partly governed by very high velocity gradients. In order to investigate blood damage, porcine and human blood was passed through a narrow Couette type shear gap applying defined high shear rates within the typical range for devices such as blood pumps or artificial heart valves (gamma = 1800/s to 110,000/s for 400 ms). Traumatization profiles of both blood species were recorded in terms of hemolysis and platelet count. Sublethal damage in terms of platelet (PF4) and complement activation (C5a) was additionally measured for human blood. Results for porcine and human blood were very similar. Hemolysis was not started until critical shear rates of about 80,000/s. Impact on platelets was severe with drops in cell count of up to 65% (at gamma = 55,000/s to 110,000/s) likely to set stronger limits to the design layout of devices than hemolysis. Concentrations of PF4 and C5a clearly increased with shear rate exhibiting stronger gradients where hemolysis started. Due to the similar results of porcine and human blood for hemolysis and platelet drop, porcine blood seems to be suitable for device testing. Selection of blood species would thus depend on handling, availability and analysis demands.
Background Artificial organs, implants and extracorporeal circulation affect the physiological flow characteristics of blood as a liquid organ. These artificial systems consist of a wide variety of biomaterials with different geometries and, therefore, with their own flow properties. Secondary flow also occurs in extra – as well as in intracorporeal circulation. Methods In order to investigate the influence of vortical flow conditions a modified Taylor-Couette system was introduced. It consisted of two coaxial cylinders whose surfaces were the target of investigation. The annular gap was filled with donor blood shear and secondary flows were produced by rotating the inner cylinder. Platelet activation and protein adsorption were investigated as markers for thrombogenicity. Results At shear rates high enough to establish stable Taylor vortices (G ≥ 550 s −1) significant differences between vortical Taylor flow and steady laminar flow were detected. At shear rates of G ≥ 550 s −1 laminar flow caused a significantly higher platelet drop and PF4 release when compared to Taylor vortex flow. Also protein adsorption per square unit was significantly higher for laminar flow. Conclusions Based on the present data we conclude that vortical flow patterns lead to an accumulation of platelets and plasma proteins in the vortex center and therefore to a decreased probability of contact between platelets and material surfaces. It can be concluded that a preactivation of the platelets circulating in extracorporeal circuits can be manifested downstream in other geometrical configurations and flow conditions.
Cation diffusion in fluorite‐structured CeO2, though far slower than anion diffusion, is an important, high‐temperature process because it governs diverse fabrication and degradation phenomena. Herein, cation diffusion is studied by means of classical molecular dynamics and metadynamics simulations. Three different mechanisms are examined: migration involving an isolated cerium vacancy, migration involving a cerium vacancy in a defect associate with an oxygen vacancy, and migration involving a cation divacancy. For each mechanism, defect diffusion coefficients are calculated as a function of temperature, from which the respective activation enthalpy of defect migration is obtained. Through comparisons with experimental cation diffusion data (specifically, of the absolute magnitude of the cation diffusivity as well as its activation enthalpy), it is concluded that cation diffusion takes place predominantly neither by isolated vacancies nor by cation vacancy–oxygen vacancy associates but by cation divacancies.
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