This chapter is concerned with computational modelling of the respiratory
system against the background of acute lung diseases and mechanical ventilation.
Conceptually, we divide the lung into two major subsystems, namely the
conducting airways and the respiratory zone. Due to their respective complexity,
both parts are out of range for a simulation resolving all relevant length scales.
Therefore, we develop novel multi-scale approaches taking into account the unresolved
parts appropriately. In the respiratory zone, an alveolar ensemble is modelled
considering not only tissue behaviour but also the influence of the covering surfactant
film. On the global scale, a homogenised parenchyma model is derived from
experiments on living lung tissue. At certain hotspots, novel nested multi-scale procedures
are utilised to simulate the dynamic behaviour of lung parenchyma as a
whole while still resolving alveolar scales locally. In the tracheo-bronchial region,
CT-based geometries are employed in fluid-structure interaction simulations. Physiological
outflow boundary conditions are derived by considering the impedance of
the unresolved parts of the lung in a fully coupled 3D-0D procedure. Finally, a novel
coupling approach enables the connection of 3D parenchyma and airway models into
one overall lung model for the first time.
«
This chapter is concerned with computational modelling of the respiratory
system against the background of acute lung diseases and mechanical ventilation.
Conceptually, we divide the lung into two major subsystems, namely the
conducting airways and the respiratory zone. Due to their respective complexity,
both parts are out of range for a simulation resolving all relevant length scales.
Therefore, we develop novel multi-scale approaches taking into account the unresolved
parts appropriatel...
»