Unsteady flow in a collapsible tube subjected to external pressure or body forces

Abstract
Flows in thin-walled, collapsible tubes are of fundamental importance to various physiologic phenomena and clinical devices.A one-dimensional, unsteady theory is developed for flows generated either by externally applied pressures or by body forces. Part 1 deals with small-amplitude, linearized flows, part 2 with large amplitude, nonlinear flows. Experimental results for a tube collapsing under external pressure are given in part 3, together with theoretical interpretations and comparative results of numerical simulations.Several new and unanticipated phenomena are revealed. These are in part associated with the highly nonlinear ‘equation of state’ (transmural pressure versus area) for a partially collapsed tube, and in part with whether the flow speed is sub- or supercritical relative to the speed of area waves. For instance, a flow produced by a spatially uniform external pressure applied to a limited region becomes choked at a flow-limiting throat at which point the fluid speed reaches the local wave speed. This throat forms at the edge of the pressurized region. The critical velocity can be exceeded with the application of certain types of spatially graded external pressures.

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