Authors
Michael M Norton, Risa J Robinson, Steven J Weinstein
Publication date
2011/1
Journal
Physical Review E—Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics
Volume
83
Issue
1
Pages
011921
Publisher
American Physical Society
Description
It has been observed that the transportability of mucus by cilial mats is dependent on the rheological properties of the mucus. Mucus is a non-Newtonian fluid that exhibits a plethora of phenomena such as stress relaxation, tensile stresses, shear thinning, and yielding behavior. These observations motivate the analysis in this paper that considers the first two attributes in order to construct a transport model. The model developed here assumes that the mucus is transported as a rigid body, the metachronal wave exhibits symplectic behavior, that the mucus is thin compared to the metachronal wavelength, and that the effects of individual cilia can be lumped together to impart an average strain to the mucus during contact. This strain invokes a stress in the mucus, whose non-Newtonian rheology creates tensile forces that persist into unsheared regions and allow the unsupported mucus to move as a rigid body whereas …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MM Norton, RJ Robinson, SJ Weinstein - Physical Review E—Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft …, 2011