Researchers at RPI aim to solve vascular issues with award funds
They receive $385,000 award
TROY, N.Y. >> Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute said that they have received an award of nearly $385,000 from the National Science Foundation for their project to develop new and improved simulation tools for modeling physical problems relating to the interaction of fluids and solids, called fluidstructure interaction problems.
Researchers said blood flowing in veins/arteries can be posed as an FSI problem, and issues such as aneurysms can be simulated mathematically.
According to a news release, approximately 84 million people in the United States suffer from some form of cardiovascular disease, causing nearly 2,200 deaths per day.
The project, titled “HighOrder Accurate Partitioned Algorithms for Fluid- Structure Interactions and Conjugate-Heat Transfer,” is led by principal investigator William Henshaw, the Margaret A. Darrin Distinguished Professor in Applied Mathematics, and co-principal investigator Donald Schwendeman, professor and head of the Department of Mathematical Sciences.
According to Schwendeman, FSI problems arise in many areas of science and en-
gineering, including human health. In recent work, RPI researchers have studied an FSI problem modeling the dynamical behavior of a bileaflet mechanical heart valve.
The mathematical models governing the behavior of the fluid and the solid are systems of partial differential equations based on certain physical laws, such as conservation of mass, momentum, and energy.
“The models are complex,” Henshaw said in the release, “and exact solutions of the governing equations are typically unavailable, so numerical methods are developed to obtain approximate solutions. Such numerical methods exist to solve the equations for the fluid and solid separately, and the difficulty for FSI problems is to merge the methods so that the coupled solutions are accurate approximations of the exact solutions of the equations.”
The RPI team said they developed new algorithms which overcome the limitations of existing FSI methods. These new methods remain accurate when standard methods fail and can provide solutions for important classes of problems, such as the mechanical heart valve.
Officials said the numerical methods use composite overlapping grids to describe the three- dimensional (moving) domains of the problems. Henshaw is the principal developer of this software, which is available at overtureframework.org.
“The exciting aspect of
the work is that many complex FSI problems can now be solved accurately and efficiently, and the software is freely available to the scientific community,” Schwendeman said in the release.
The newly developed simulation tools for FSI problems will be useful for a broad range of applications. There will be many potential extensions of the new work to treat important problems, such as those in aeronautical engineering (flow-induced vibrations of structures), biomedical engineering (modeling mechanical heart valves), mechanical engineering (wave energy generation devices), and more. In addition, the theory, algorithms, and novel interface coupling conditions developed for this project will be useful for the broader scientific community.
Collaborators include Jeffrey Banks, associate professor of mathematical sciences and the Eliza Ricketts Foundation Career Development Chair; postdoc Qi Tang; and graduate students Fanlong Meng, Daniel Serino, Kamala Liu, Arthur Newell, and Sijia Huang.
Research collaborations like this exemplify the vision of The New Polytechnic, an emerging paradigm for higher education, which recognizes that global challenges and opportunities are so great they cannot be adequately addressed by even the most talented person working alone. Research at Rensselaer addresses some of the world’s most pressing technological challenges—from energy security and sustainable development to biotechnology and human health.