Roman S. Voronov
University of Oklahoma
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Publication
Featured researches published by Roman S. Voronov.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006
Roman S. Voronov; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou; Lloyd L. Lee
Correlations between contact angle, a measure of the wetting of surfaces, and slip length are developed using nonequilibrium molecular dynamics for a Lennard-Jones fluid in Couette flow between graphitelike hexagonal-lattice walls. The fluid-wall interaction is varied by modulating the interfacial energy parameter epsilonr=epsilonsfepsilonff and the size parameter sigmar=sigmasfsigmaff, (s=solid, f=fluid) to achieve hydrophobicity (solvophobicity) or hydrophilicity (solvophilicity). The effects of surface chemistry, as well as the effects of temperature and shear rate on the slip length are determined. The contact angle increases from 25 degrees to 147 degrees on highly hydrophobic surfaces (as epsilonr decreases from 0.5 to 0.1), as expected. The slip length is functionally dependent on the affinity strength parameters epsilonr and sigmar: increasing logarithmically with decreasing surface energy epsilonr (i.e., more hydrophobic), while decreasing with power law with decreasing size sigmar. The mechanism for the latter is different from the energetic case. While weak wall forces (small epsilonr) produce hydrophobicity, larger sigmar smoothes out the surface roughness. Both tend to increase the slip. The slip length grows rapidly with a high shear rate, as wall velocity increases three decades from 100 to 10(5) ms. We demonstrate that fluid-solid interfaces with low epsilonr and high sigmar should be chosen to increase slip and are prime candidates for drag reduction.
Journal of Biomechanics | 2010
Roman S. Voronov; Samuel VanGordon; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou
Flow-induced shear stresses have been found to be a stimulatory factor in pre-osteoblastic cells seeded in 3D porous scaffolds and cultured under continuous flow perfusion. However, due to the complex internal structure of porous scaffolds, analytical estimation of the local shear forces is impractical. The primary goal of this work is to investigate the shear stress distributions within Poly(l-lactic acid) scaffolds via computation. Scaffolds used in this study are prepared via salt leeching with various geometric characteristics (80-95% porosity and 215-402.5microm average pore size). High resolution micro-computed tomography is used to obtain their 3D structure. Flow of osteogenic media through the scaffolds is modeled via lattice Boltzmann method. It is found that the surface stress distributions within the scaffolds are characterized by long tails to the right (a positive skewness). Their shape is not strongly dependent on the scaffold manufacturing parameters, but the magnitudes of the stresses are. Correlations are prepared for the estimation of the average surface shear stress experienced by the cells within the scaffolds and of the probability density function of the surface stresses. Though the manufacturing technique does not appear to affect the shape of the shear stress distributions, presence of manufacturing defects is found to be significant: defects create areas of high flow and high stress along their periphery. The results of this study are applicable to other polymer systems provided that they are manufactured by a similar salt leeching technique, while the imaging/modeling approach is applicable to all scaffolds relevant to tissue engineering.
Applied Physics Letters | 2010
Roman S. Voronov; Samuel VanGordon; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou
Simulation results for the distribution of flow-induced wall stresses within 36 different porous scaffolds with porosity larger than 80% indicate that the normalized wall stress follows a single gamma distribution. Experimental and computational results for scaffolds prepared via different techniques from different materials and by other laboratories follow the same distribution. The form of this universal distribution is offered, as well as the methodology to obtain it for laminar flow through high porosity materials.
Technology | 2016
Taseen A. Alam; Quang L. Pham; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou; Robert L. Shambaugh; Roman S. Voronov
Computational modeling has been promulgated as a means of optimizing artificial bone tissue culturing ex vivo. In the present report, we show, as a proof-of-concept, that it is possible to model the exact microenvironment within the scaffolds while accounting for their architectural complexities and the presence of cells/tissues in their pores. Our results clearly indicate that image-based modeling has the potential to be a powerful tool for computer-assisted tissue engineering.
Chemical Physics Letters | 2007
Roman S. Voronov; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou; Lloyd L. Lee
Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research | 2011
Samuel VanGordon; Roman S. Voronov; Taren B. Blue; Robert L. Shambaugh; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Fluids | 2011
Roman S. Voronov; Samuel VanGordon; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou
Tissue Engineering Part C-methods | 2013
Roman S. Voronov; Samuel VanGordon; Robert L. Shambaugh; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas
Physical Review E | 2014
Ngoc H. Pham; Roman S. Voronov; Naga Rajesh Tummala; Dimitrios V. Papavassiliou
Fluids | 2018
Cortes Williams; Olufemi Kadri; Roman S. Voronov; Vassilios I. Sikavitsas