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On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials

In this work, we use the rule of mixtures to develop an equivalent material model in which the total strain energy density is split into the isotropic part related to the matrix component and the anisotropic energy contribution related to the fiber effects. For the isotropic energy part, we select t...

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Autores principales: Elías-Zúñiga, Alex, Baylón, Karen, Ferrer, Inés, Serenó, Lídia, Garcia-Romeu, Maria Luisa, Bagudanch, Isabel, Grabalosa, Jordi, Pérez-Recio, Tania, Martínez-Romero, Oscar, Ortega-Lara, Wendy, Elizalde, Luis Ernesto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5453134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28788466
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma7010441
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author Elías-Zúñiga, Alex
Baylón, Karen
Ferrer, Inés
Serenó, Lídia
Garcia-Romeu, Maria Luisa
Bagudanch, Isabel
Grabalosa, Jordi
Pérez-Recio, Tania
Martínez-Romero, Oscar
Ortega-Lara, Wendy
Elizalde, Luis Ernesto
author_facet Elías-Zúñiga, Alex
Baylón, Karen
Ferrer, Inés
Serenó, Lídia
Garcia-Romeu, Maria Luisa
Bagudanch, Isabel
Grabalosa, Jordi
Pérez-Recio, Tania
Martínez-Romero, Oscar
Ortega-Lara, Wendy
Elizalde, Luis Ernesto
author_sort Elías-Zúñiga, Alex
collection PubMed
description In this work, we use the rule of mixtures to develop an equivalent material model in which the total strain energy density is split into the isotropic part related to the matrix component and the anisotropic energy contribution related to the fiber effects. For the isotropic energy part, we select the amended non-Gaussian strain energy density model, while the energy fiber effects are added by considering the equivalent anisotropic volumetric fraction contribution, as well as the isotropized representation form of the eight-chain energy model that accounts for the material anisotropic effects. Furthermore, our proposed material model uses a phenomenological non-monotonous softening function that predicts stress softening effects and has an energy term, derived from the pseudo-elasticity theory, that accounts for residual strain deformations. The model’s theoretical predictions are compared with experimental data collected from human vaginal tissues, mice skin, poly(glycolide-co-caprolactone) (PGC25 3-0) and polypropylene suture materials and tracheal and brain human tissues. In all cases examined here, our equivalent material model closely follows stress-softening and residual strain effects exhibited by experimental data.
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spelling pubmed-54531342017-07-28 On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials Elías-Zúñiga, Alex Baylón, Karen Ferrer, Inés Serenó, Lídia Garcia-Romeu, Maria Luisa Bagudanch, Isabel Grabalosa, Jordi Pérez-Recio, Tania Martínez-Romero, Oscar Ortega-Lara, Wendy Elizalde, Luis Ernesto Materials (Basel) Article In this work, we use the rule of mixtures to develop an equivalent material model in which the total strain energy density is split into the isotropic part related to the matrix component and the anisotropic energy contribution related to the fiber effects. For the isotropic energy part, we select the amended non-Gaussian strain energy density model, while the energy fiber effects are added by considering the equivalent anisotropic volumetric fraction contribution, as well as the isotropized representation form of the eight-chain energy model that accounts for the material anisotropic effects. Furthermore, our proposed material model uses a phenomenological non-monotonous softening function that predicts stress softening effects and has an energy term, derived from the pseudo-elasticity theory, that accounts for residual strain deformations. The model’s theoretical predictions are compared with experimental data collected from human vaginal tissues, mice skin, poly(glycolide-co-caprolactone) (PGC25 3-0) and polypropylene suture materials and tracheal and brain human tissues. In all cases examined here, our equivalent material model closely follows stress-softening and residual strain effects exhibited by experimental data. MDPI 2014-01-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5453134/ /pubmed/28788466 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma7010441 Text en © 2014 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Elías-Zúñiga, Alex
Baylón, Karen
Ferrer, Inés
Serenó, Lídia
Garcia-Romeu, Maria Luisa
Bagudanch, Isabel
Grabalosa, Jordi
Pérez-Recio, Tania
Martínez-Romero, Oscar
Ortega-Lara, Wendy
Elizalde, Luis Ernesto
On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials
title On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials
title_full On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials
title_fullStr On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials
title_full_unstemmed On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials
title_short On the Rule of Mixtures for Predicting Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Biological Tissues and Biocompatible Materials
title_sort on the rule of mixtures for predicting stress-softening and residual strain effects in biological tissues and biocompatible materials
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5453134/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28788466
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma7010441
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