Viscoelasticity of human blood.

Measurements made for oscillatory flow of blood in circular tubes show that blood possesses elastic properties which make consideration of its viscous properties alone inadequate. Results are for a frequency of 10 Hz while varying the amplitude of the velocity gradient for red blood cells in plasma at concentrations ranging from 0 to 100% apparent hematocrit. For velocity gradients less than 1-2 sec(-1) both the viscous and elastic components of the shearing stress are linearly related to the gradient. For hematocrits above 20% the elastic component of the complex coefficient of viscosity increases with hematocrit approximately to the third power while the viscous component increases exponentially. Oscillatory flow measurements at very low hematocrits, when extrapolated to zero cell concentration, give the intrinsic viscosity of the average individual isolated red cell. The viscous part of this is found to be 1.7 which is compared with theoretical values from the rigid ellipsoid model for which the minimum possible value is 2.5. This difference is attributed to cell deformability. With increasing velocity gradient nonlinear properties develop. The viscous component of the complex viscosity becomes of the order of the steady flow viscosity at high gradients while the elastic component tends to decrease in inverse proportion to the gradient. Thus, the elastic component of the oscillatory stress tends to saturate, this tendency appearing at the approximate level of the yield stress.

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