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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Evans, Robert L. | Kirkwood, R. Bruce | Opsahl, David G.
Affiliations: Division of Biometry and Department of Physiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455
Note: [1] Partial support of this work under National Institutes of Health Grants HE 08534 and 5-T1-G M-43 is hereby gratefully acknowledged.
Abstract: Measurements were made of the stress-strain behavior of human blood during two transition sequences (from rest to eventually a 25 sec−1 strain rate, and from 64 sec−1 to an eventual 127 sec−1 strain rate) in a modified Brookfield cone-and-plate viscometer. The data were obtained laboriously from movies of the viscometer and a stop watch at 24 and 64 frames/sec, respectively, and are shown in Figs. 1 and 2. These show major changes of stress (in both experiments) prior to any appreciable changes of the strain rates of the blood. The first experiment shows a yield stress of about 0.5 dyne/cm2, jerky starting of the blood, and an eventual fluidity of 10.5 cm sec/g. The second experiment shows first a prompt fluidity fall from 14 to 9 cm sec/g with rising stress and almost constant strain rate, then most of 2 sec at about fluidity 9, a sudden jump to about fluidity 15 (accompanied by a sharp drop in actual stress to near its eventual value), and subsequent marked oscillations of strain rate and fluidity. In this interval the fluidity passed through a maximum above 20 and then settled down to an eventual value of 16 cm sec/g.
DOI: 10.3233/BIR-1971-83-402
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 8, no. 3-4, pp. 125-128, 1971
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