4.7 Article

Output of a valveless Liebau pump with biologically relevant vessel properties and compression frequencies

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90820-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation EAGER Award [1927694]
  2. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  3. Directorate For Engineering [1927694] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Liebau pump is a valveless pump capable of creating unidirectional flow, whose biological feasibility is controversial. By using a compliance segment made of silicone rubber to mimic the Young modulus of soft tissues, quantitative relationships between viscosity, frequency, and flowrate can be derived. Liebau pump can generate flowrates comparable to peristaltic pumps in physiologically sized vessels.
Liebau pump is a tubular, non-peristaltic, pulsatile pump capable of creating unidirectional flow in the absence of valves. It requires asymmetrical positioning of the pincher relative to the attachment sites of its elastic segment to the rest of the circuit. Biological feasibility of such valveless pumps remains a hotly debated topic. To test the feasibility of the Liebau-based pumping in vessels with biologically relevant properties we quantified the output of Liebau pumps with their compliant segments made of a silicone rubber that mimicked the Young modulus of soft tissues. The lengths, the inner diameters, thicknesses of the tested compliant segments ranged from 1 to 5 cm, 3 to 8 mm and 0.3 to 1 mm, respectively. The compliant segment of the setup was compressed at 0.5-2.5 Hz frequencies using a 3.5-mm-wide rectangular piston. A nearest-neighbor tracking algorithm was used to track movements of 0.5-mm carbon particles within the system. The viscosity of the aqueous solution was varied by increased percentage of glycerin. Measurements yielded quantitative relationships between viscosity, frequency of compression and the net flowrate. The use of the Liebau principle of valveless pumping in conjunction with physiologically sized vessel and contraction frequencies yields flowrates comparable to peristaltic pumps of the same dimensions. We conclude that the data confirm physiological feasibility of Liebau-based pumping and warrant further testing of its mechanism using excised biological conduits or tissue engineered components. Such biomimetic pumps can serve as energy-efficient flow generators in microdevices or to study the function of embryonic heart during its normal development or in diseased states.

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