Abstract
The principle of minimal work requires that the conducting airways of the human lung should have a maximum radius for minimal resistance to gas flow. At the same time there is a requirement that the airways should have a minimal volume for economy of space. These two opposing requirements have been investigated mathematically, and a method for calculating the angle of branching which produces minimal volume has been derived. The relationship of the radii of the parent and daughter branches to produce minimal resistance has been similarly defined. By measurement of a bronchial cast from a human lung the extent to which the predicted optimum structure is realized in practice has been shown. The change in structure associated with change of function at the transition from conducting airway to diffusion zone has been demonstrated.
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Literature
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Horsfield, K., Cumming, G. Angles of branching and diameters of branches in the human bronchial tree. Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics 29, 245–259 (1967). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02476898
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02476898