Basic hydraulic pump work-energy relationship

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the isovolumetric contraction phase of the heart's left ventricle, where pressure increases without a change in volume. The question raised is how the ventricle can exert work on the blood to raise pressure if the wall does not move, with speculation about the ventricle shrinking slightly to facilitate this. The professor asserts that the contraction is genuinely isovolumetric, leading to confusion about how pressure can rise in a closed system. The conversation also touches on the relationship between pressure, temperature, and density, emphasizing that significant pressure changes yield only infinitesimal volume changes in liquids. Ultimately, the debate highlights the complexities of fluid dynamics in biological systems.
Ignis24
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I have a very simple question that's been driving me nuts. It's biology context, but probably all the physics equates to normal positive displacement pumps.

The pressure in and volume of the left ventricle of the heart can be measured experimentally. (For example, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure-volume_loop_analysis_in_cardiology). During a typical contraction, blood stored in the atrium first fills the ventricle while the muscular wall is relaxed. When the ventricle is full enough, the ventricle wall begins to contract. The rising pressure in the ventricle pushes the mitral valve that leads to the atrium closed, meaning there's no backflow out from then on. When the pressure gets high enough, it pushes the aortic valve open, and the ventricle ejects the blood into the aorta.

The phase of contraction after the mitral valve closes but before the aortic valve opens is called isovolumetric contraction. When I first heard this, I assumed that "isovolumetric" has to be a simplification like "infinite conducting wire". I can imagine, from a biological perspective, that the ventricle wall could get stiffer without the ventricle changing its volume. But I have no idea how this increasing stiffness could be translated into rising pressure in the blood inside the ventricle. If the wall does not move, how can it do work on the blood to raise the pressure? How does the blood know how stiff the ventricle wall is if nothing is moving in the system? My guess was, the ventricle is actually shrinking a tiny amount (and blood is not actually perfectly incompressible), which allows for energy transfer to the blood to account for the pressure rise.

My professor swears that I'm confused, and the contraction is truly isovolumetric - not just unmeasurably small. But I still couldn't follow him. Basically, what I'm stuck on is if you block up the outlet of a pump, how does the pressure go up inside?

Thanks...
 
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Changes of density

In general, density can be changed by changing either the pressure or the temperature. Increasing the pressure always increases the density of a material. Increasing the temperature generally decreases the density, but there are notable exceptions to this generalization. For example, the density of water increases between its melting point at 0 °C and 4 °C; similar behavior is observed in silicon at low temperatures.

The effect of pressure and temperature on the densities of liquids and solids is small. The compressibility for a typical liquid or solid is 10−6 bar−1 (1 bar = 0.1 MPa) and a typical thermal expansivity is 10−5 K−1. This roughly translates into needing around ten thousand times atmospheric pressure to reduce the volume of a substance by one percent. (Although the pressures needed may be around a thousand times smaller for sandy soil and some clays.) A one percent expansion of volume typically requires a temperature increase on the order of thousands of degrees Celsius.

source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Density#Changes_of_density

If nothing goes in and nothing goes out (i.e. mass is constant), then if the density varies, the volume must also vary.

For example, this is the pressure-temperature-density relationship for water (source: http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/fluid-density-temperature-pressure-d_309.html):

water-density-temperature-pressure_2.png


According to the equation found in the previous link, increasing the pressure of water by 12 000 Pa (90 mmHg) would result in a density increase (or volume decrease) of only 0.00048 %.

I would argue the infinitesimal volume change.
 
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