Rodents are routinely used in inhalation toxicology tests as human surrogates. However, in vitro dosimetry tests in rodent casts are still scarce due to small rodent airways and in vitro tests to quantify sub-regional dosimetry are still impractical. We hypothesized that for inertial particles whose deposition is dominated by air?ow convection (Reynolds number) and particle inertia (Stokes number), the deposition should be similar among airway replicas of different scales if their Reynolds and Stokes numbers are kept the same. In this study, we aimed to (1) numerically test the hypothesis in three airway geometries: a USP induction port, a human nose model, and a Sprague-Dawley rat nose model, and (2) ?nd the range of applicability of this hypothesis. Five
variants of the USP and human nose models and three variants of the rat nose model were tested. Inhalation rates and particle sizes were scaled to match the Reynolds number and Stokes numbers. A low-Reynolds-number k–? model was used to resolve the air?ow and a Lagrangian tracking algorithm was used to simulate the particle transport and deposition. Statistical analysis of predicted doses was conducted using ANOVA. For normal inhalation rates and particle dia- meters ranging from 0.5 to 24 mm, the deposition differences between the life-size and scaled models are
insigni?cant for all airway geometries considered (i.e., human nose, USP, and rat nose). Furthermore, the deposition patterns and exit particle pro?les also look similar among scaled models. However, deposition rates and patterns start to deviate if inhalation rates are too low, or particle sizes are too large. For the rat nose, the threshold velocity was found to be
0.71 m/s and the threshold Froude number to be 50. Results of this study provide a theoretical
foundation for sub-regional in vitro dosimetry tests in small animals and for interpretation of
data from inter-species or intra-species with varying body sizes.
Revised: March 2, 2020 |
Published: April 26, 2016
Citation
Xi J., J. Kim, X.A. Si, R.A. Corley, and Y. Zhou. 2016.Modeling of inertial deposition in scaled models of rat and human nasal airways: Towards in vitro regional dosimetry in small animals.Journal of Aerosol Science 99.PNNL-SA-122330.doi:10.1016/j.jaerosci.2016.01.013