2015
DOI: 10.1142/s1793524516500066
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Mathematical model of thermal effects of blinking in human eye

Abstract: Blinking is regarded as the continuous interrupted eyelid closure or opening and its thermal effect will compromise between these two. During a blink, the heat loss via convection, radiation and tear evaporation from cornea is prevented, warm tear is layered across corneal surface and the vessels of the palpebral conjunctiva provide heat to anterior eye. In most of the thermal models in human eye that are found in literatures, effect of blinking is not included, simulation is carried out only in open eye. Thus… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The heat loss from breast skin is caused by convection, radiation and sweat evaporation. The mixed boundary condition [18,19,21] is used in outer surface of the breast:…”
Section: Boundary Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The heat loss from breast skin is caused by convection, radiation and sweat evaporation. The mixed boundary condition [18,19,21] is used in outer surface of the breast:…”
Section: Boundary Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, human eyelashes act as passive dust controlling system and reduce evaporation and particle deposition up to 50% [73], further facilitating the defense against foreign particles (including microdroplets). What is the effect of blinking on the airflow within the "protected volume of air" is currently unknown, however, it can be speculated that it would create some change in low-velocity airflow, as it was estimated that blinking increases corneal temperature by 1.3°C [74] and this could create convection air microcurrents away from the corneal surface. The speed and direction of local airflow can be further modified by artificial objects in eye vicinity.…”
Section: Natural and Artificial Airflow Restrictionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During a blink the act of eyelid closure occupies 0.05 seconds, the closure is maintained for 0.15 seconds and is followed by eyelid opening taking 0.2 seconds, thus the whole blink lasts approximately 0.4 seconds with mean inter blink time of 2.8 seconds in male and 4 seconds in female [5]. There are four types of temperature effects of blinking on anterior corneal surface:heating/cooling due to spread of warm tears and lipids across the surface of cornea, heating/cooling caused by the movement of the eyelid, heating/cooling via convection, radiation and tear evaporation and heating/cooling by the formation of new layer of air over the surface of cornea [17]. The use of two wheelers in developing countries has been increasing rapidly.…”
Section: Significance Of Blinking In Forced Convectionmentioning
confidence: 99%