Issue 25, 2024

Morphology, repulsion, and ordering of red blood cells in viscoelastic flows under confinement

Abstract

Red blood cells (RBC), the primary carriers of oxygen in the body, play a crucial role across several biomedical applications, while also being an essential model system of a deformable object in the microfluidics and soft matter fields. However, RBC behavior in viscoelastic liquids, which holds promise in enhancing microfluidic diagnostic applications, remains poorly studied. We here show that using viscoelastic polymer solutions as a suspending carrier causes changes in the clustering and shape of flowing RBC in microfluidic flows when compared to a standard Newtonian suspending liquid. Additionally, when the local RBC concentration increases to a point where hydrodynamic interactions take place, we observe the formation of equally-spaced RBC structures, resembling the viscoelasticity-driven ordered particles observed previously in the literature, thus providing the first experimental evidence of viscoelasticity-driven cell ordering. The observed RBC ordering, unaffected by polymer molecular architecture, persists as long as the surrounding medium exhibits shear-thinning, viscoelastic properties. Complementary numerical simulations reveal that viscoelasticity-induced repulsion between RBCs leads to equidistant structures, with shear-thinning modulating this effect. Our results open the way for the development of new biomedical technologies based on the use of viscoelastic liquids while also clarifying fundamental aspects related to multibody hydrodynamic interactions in viscoelastic microfluidic flows.

Graphical abstract: Morphology, repulsion, and ordering of red blood cells in viscoelastic flows under confinement

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Apr 2024
Accepted
07 Jun 2024
First published
14 Jun 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 4950-4963

Morphology, repulsion, and ordering of red blood cells in viscoelastic flows under confinement

S. M. Recktenwald, Y. Rashidi, I. Graham, P. E. Arratia, F. Del Giudice and C. Wagner, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 4950 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00446A

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