Using 3D fluid-structure interaction model to analyse the biomechanical properties of erythrocyte
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Publication:552870
DOI10.1016/J.PHYSLETA.2007.09.067zbMATH Open1217.92033OpenAlexW2016504611MaRDI QIDQ552870FDOQ552870
Authors: Jianyong Qiao, Sumit K. Garg
Publication date: 26 July 2011
Published in: Physics Letters. A (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physleta.2007.09.067
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Biomechanics (92C10) Physiological flow (92C35) Cell biology (92C37) Incompressible inviscid fluids (76B99)
Cites Work
Cited In (20)
- Computational modeling of membrane viscosity of red blood cells
- Red blood cell transport in bounded shear flow: on the effects of cell viscoelastic properties
- An implicit immersed boundary method for three-dimensional fluid-membrane interactions
- Assessment of coupled bilayer–cytoskeleton modelling strategy for red blood cell dynamics in flow
- Viscoelastic response of thin membranes with application to red blood cells
- The inverse problem of red blood cells deformed by optical tweezers
- The measurement of shear modulus and membrane surface viscosity of RBC membrane with ektacytometry: A new technique
- Cardiovascular mechanics: Investigation of two components, tissue heart valves and blood cells
- Multiscale modelling of erythrocytes in Stokes flow
- Formation of the three-dimensional geometry of the red blood cell membrane
- Effective computational modeling of erythrocyte electro-deformation
- Probing red blood cell mechanics, rheology and dynamics with a two-component multi-scale model
- Computational blood cell mechanics: road towards models and biomedical applications
- A three-dimensional quasicontinuum approach for predicting biomechanical properties of malaria-infected red blood cell membrane
- Atomistic-continuum model for probing the biomechanical properties of human erythrocyte membrane under extreme conditions
- Multiscale computational framework for predicting viscoelasticity of red blood cells in aging and mechanical fatigue
- Nonlinear parameters, a powerful tool on analyzing mammalian erythrocytes subjected to mechanical stress
- Multi-component red blood cell computational modeling: a new mathematical formulation
- Modeling of blood cell surface oscillations as fluid-filled multilayer viscoelastic shells
- A quasi-continuum model for human erythrocyte membrane based on the higher order Cauchy-Born rule
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