May 28, 2026 11:00 a.m.–3:55 p.m. EDT

Back to Events Calendar

COMSOL Day: MedTech

See what is possible with multiphysics modeling

By enabling users to understand, design, and optimize medical devices and processes, modeling and simulation can address important issues in the field of medical technology such as patient safety, product quality, effectiveness, and regulatory compliance. The COMSOL Multiphysics® software offers modeling interfaces for a wide array of phenomena, including fluid flow, chemical reactions, electromagnetic fields, acoustics, and heat transfer in solids and biological tissues, which allows for precise virtual prototyping — essential for a comprehensive understanding of the involved physics and interactions.

COMSOL Multiphysics® also features tools like the Application Builder and the Model Manager for facilitating collaboration among a diverse group of scientists and engineers through models and simulation apps.

Join us for COMSOL Day: MedTech to learn how multiphysics simulations can efficiently optimize design and R&D in medical technology. Keynote speakers will share their experiences integrating modeling and simulation into their projects, and COMSOL engineers will highlight key software features for analyzing medical devices and processes.

Schedule

11:00 a.m.

Modeling and simulation is playing an increasingly important role in the medical device industry, helping organizations reduce physical prototyping, limit animal testing, and shorten development cycles. As simulation becomes more central to device design and regulatory submissions, establishing the credibility of computational models remains a challenge. The COMSOL Multiphysics® software provides a comprehensive environment for building and validating multiphysics models relevant to medical technologies.

Join this session to learn how multiphysics simulation can support credible modeling and help advance safer, more innovative medical technologies. We will present verification and validation (V&V) examples spanning several physics areas, including electromagnetic heating, fluid–structure interaction, and transport phenomena. In addition, we will showcase studies that illustrate how modeling and simulation is applied in practice.

11:20 a.m.
Keynote Speaker
11:40 a.m.
Q&A
11:50 a.m.

CFD simulation is a powerful tool in the development of medical technology, enabling virtual prototyping and deeper insight into the transport processes that determine device performance.

COMSOL Multiphysics® and its add-on products offer a broad set of modeling features for simulating CFD, polymer flow, species transport, porous media flow, and microfluidics. The software's diverse capabilities are well suited for the wide range of biomedical applications, including blood pumps and blood vessels, biochemical sensors and diagnostic tests, lab-on-a-chip systems, and drug delivery devices.

In this session, we will demonstrate how to model transport-driven medical and biomedical devices using COMSOL Multiphysics® and highlight multiphysics workflows relevant to both sensor performance and CFD-based design and analysis.

12:20 p.m.
Q&A
12:35 p.m.

Medical technology development increasingly relies on complex 3D geometries originating from medical imaging, 3D scanning, and CAD design. In many cases, STL-based anatomical models and CAD-based device or implant components need to be combined to build simulation-ready digital prototypes.

The COMSOL Multiphysics® software supports importing STL and CAD files, repairing and editing surface meshes, and forming watertight computational domains suitable for meshing and multiphysics simulation. This support includes tools for identifying and repairing defects such as holes and intersecting elements, repositioning and uniting multiple imported parts, resolving gaps and overlaps, and generating high-quality volume meshes from repaired surface meshes. The software also enables combining imported mesh-based anatomy with parameterized CAD or geometry created directly in COMSOL, making it possible to integrate implants and medical devices into patient-specific models and perform design studies.

This session gives an overview of the functionality used for importing, repairing, and combining STL and CAD models for applications within medical technology.

1:05 p.m.
Q&A
1:20 p.m.
Keynote Speaker
1:40 p.m.
Q&A
1:50 p.m.

The use of modeling and simulation is essential in the development of minimally invasive therapies and procedures for analyzing heat generation in biological tissues. By incorporating thermal damage models, engineers and scientists can evaluate the efficacy and safety of clinical procedures, such as MRI examinations, and gain valuable insights into emerging technologies, such as pulsed field ablation. Moreover, as the use of implanted medical devices continues to grow, predicting and minimizing MRI-induced heating near implanted devices remains an important safety consideration.

Join this session for an in-depth look at how COMSOL Multiphysics® can be used to implement an ASTM standard for assessing RF-induced heating in the vicinity of implants during MRI. We will also cover ablation procedures and discuss the capabilities in COMSOL Multiphysics® for modeling the electromagnetic properties of biological tissues and cell membrane electroporation, both of which are critical to the development of pulsed field ablation technologies.

2:25 p.m.
Q&A
2:40 p.m.
Keynote Speaker
3:00 p.m.
Q&A
3:10 p.m.

Modeling and simulation can be used to design and optimize medical devices involving acoustics and vibrations, as well as to support the regulatory approval process for new medical devices and treatments. For biomedical ultrasound technologies, well-established modeling practices exist for studying both diagnostic and therapeutic applications, such as real-time imaging, targeted drug delivery, and tumor ablation.

In this session, we will review the ultrasound modeling capabilities in COMSOL Multiphysics®, beginning with a piezoelectric transducer array for diagnostic imaging. We will then cover therapeutic applications of focused ultrasound for tissue heating, including an uncertainty quantification (UQ) example using an FDA-approved tissue-mimicking material. In addition, we will go over nonlinear ultrasound modeling approaches for high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) propagation through a tissue phantom, including the resulting tissue heating.

3:40 p.m.
Q&A
3:55 p.m.
Concluding Remarks

Register for COMSOL Day: MedTech

To register for the event, please create a new account or log into your existing account. You will need a COMSOL Access account to attend COMSOL Day: MedTech.

For registration questions or more information contact info@comsol.com.

Forgot your Password?
You have successfully logged in. This page will refresh to complete your event registration.
You have successfully created a new COMSOL Access account. This page will refresh to complete your event registration.

COMSOL Day Details

Local Start Time:
May 28, 2026 | 11:00 a.m. EDT (UTC-04:00)
My Start Time:
Select time zone below: