Abstract:
The primary objective of this thesis is to investigate the flow of various physiological
and biological fluids in a small diameter permeable tube under different flow
conditions as an application to the flow in the renal tubules of kidney. The problem of
creeping motion of an incompressible fluid in a small diameter permeable tube is
being presented. The fluid absorption at the tube wall is taken as a function of wall
permeability and the pressure gradient across the tube wall. Hydro dynamical flow
equations and the appropriate boundary conditions for the flow of Newtonian fluid
and some non-Newtonian fluids in a permeable tube are developed. Assuming the
tube radius to be very small as compared to its length, exact/approximate solutions of
these equations are obtained. Expressions describing variations in the axial volumetric
flow rate, mean pressure difference, wall leakage flux, wall shear stress and the
fractional re-absorption are derived. Graphs are sketched in order to describe effects
of various parameters of interest on different flow variables and implications of the
results are discussed briefly. The obtained solutions are applied to the flow problem in
the renal proximal tubule of kidneys and theoretical values of the wall permeability
parameter, inlet pressure, mean pressure drop and fractional re-absorption in the
proximal tubule are obtained. It is found that along with other quantities of interest,
the mean pressure drop and the fractional reabsorption in proximal tubule have
significant variations as the underlying fluid model and/or flow conditions are varied.
For specific values of parameters, the expression of the axial flow rate reveals that
volumetric flow rate in the renal tubule decreases exponentially as a function of the
axial distance. This is a biologically significant, well accepted and frequently reported
result in the literature. When certain parameters are set equal to zero, the derived
solutions coincide well with the existing solutions for creeping flow of a linearly
viscous (Newtonian) fluid in a small diameter permeable tube.