scholarly journals Dirac cones and chiral selection of elastic waves in a soft strip

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (48) ◽  
pp. 30186-30190
Author(s):  
Maxime Lanoy ◽  
Fabrice Lemoult ◽  
Antonin Eddi ◽  
Claire Prada

We study the propagation of in-plane elastic waves in a soft thin strip, a specific geometrical and mechanical hybrid framework which we expect to exhibit a Dirac-like cone. We separate the low frequencies guided modes (typically 100 Hz for a 1-cm-wide strip) and obtain experimentally the full dispersion diagram. Dirac cones are evidenced together with other remarkable wave phenomena such as negative wave velocity or pseudo-zero group velocity (ZGV). Our measurements are convincingly supported by a model (and numerical simulation) for both Neumann and Dirichlet boundary conditions. Finally, we perform one-way chiral selection by carefully setting the source position and polarization. Therefore, we show that soft materials support atypical wave-based phenomena, which is all of the more interesting as they make most of the biological tissues.

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (14) ◽  
pp. 7606-7612 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xueyu Li ◽  
Kunpeng Cui ◽  
Tao Lin Sun ◽  
Lingpu Meng ◽  
Chengtao Yu ◽  
...  

Load-bearing biological tissues, such as muscles, are highly fatigue-resistant, but how the exquisite hierarchical structures of biological tissues contribute to their excellent fatigue resistance is not well understood. In this work, we study antifatigue properties of soft materials with hierarchical structures using polyampholyte hydrogels (PA gels) as a simple model system. PA gels are tough and self-healing, consisting of reversible ionic bonds at the 1-nm scale, a cross-linked polymer network at the 10-nm scale, and bicontinuous hard/soft phase networks at the 100-nm scale. We find that the polymer network at the 10-nm scale determines the threshold of energy release rateG0above which the crack grows, while the bicontinuous phase networks at the 100-nm scale significantly decelerate the crack advance until a transitionGtranfar aboveG0. In situ small-angle X-ray scattering analysis reveals that the hard phase network suppresses the crack advance to show decelerated fatigue fracture, andGtrancorresponds to the rupture of the hard phase network.


Soft Matter ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (16) ◽  
pp. 3353-3361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eline E. van Haaften ◽  
Mark C. van Turnhout ◽  
Nicholas A. Kurniawan

We propose a simple image-based analysis approach to accurately estimate the mechanical properties of ring-shaped materials.


2021 ◽  
Vol 250 ◽  
pp. 01033
Author(s):  
Aaron Graham ◽  
Clive R Siviour

Characterising the mechanical response of ultra-soft materials is challenging, particularly at high strain rates and frequencies [1]. Time Temperature Superposition (TTS) can sometimes be used to mitigate these limitations [2], however not all materials are suitable for TTS. Biological tissues are particularly difficult to test: in addition to the extreme softness, challenges arise due to specimen inhomogeneity, sensitivity to boundary conditions, natural biological variability, and complex post-mortem changes. In the current study, a novel experimental apparatus and methodology was developed and validated using low modulus silicone elastomers as model materials. The full field visco-elastic shear response was characterised over a wide range of deformation frequencies (100-1000+ Hz) and amplitudes using Digital Image Correlation (DIC) and the Virtual Fields Method (VFM). This methodology allows for the extraction of fullfield material properties that would be difficult or impossible to obtain using traditional engineering techniques.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Konstantin Volokh

Abstract Abstract Many soft materials and biological tissues comprise isotropic matrix reinforced by fibers in the characteristic directions. Hyperelastic constitutive equations for such materials are usually formulated in terms of a Lagrangean strain tensor referred to the initial configuration and Lagrangean structure tensors defining characteristic directions of anisotropy. Such equations are “pushed forward” to the current configuration. Obtained in this way, Eulerian constitutive equations are often favorable from both theoretical and computational standpoints. Abstract In the present note, we show that the described two-step procedure is not necessary and anisotropic hyperelasticity can be introduced directly in terms of an Eulerian strain tensor and Eulerian structure tensors referring to the current configuration. The newly developed constitutive equation is further applied to the particular case of the transverse isotropy for the sake of illustration.


Soft Matter ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (37) ◽  
pp. 7390-7397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher W. Barney ◽  
Yue Zheng ◽  
Shuai Wu ◽  
Shengqiang Cai ◽  
Alfred J. Crosby

Needle-induced cavitation (NIC) locally probes the elastic and fracture properties of soft materials, such as gels and biological tissues.


Geophysics ◽  
1962 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 327-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. White

This paper concerns axially symmetric solutions for waves propagating along a cylinder in an infinite elastic solid. Solutions are presented describing unattenuated propagation along the axis at phase velocities higher than shear and compressional speeds in the solid, in contradiction to earlier publications. Special attention is given to the limiting case of phase velocity equal to compressional speed in the solid, which at low frequencies very closely approximates the coupling of a fluid‐filled borehole to a plane compressional wave in the surrounding solid. Comparison with some experiments in a uniform section of Pierre shale show excellent agreement at low frequencies. In the low‐frequency limit, these solutions reduce to an approximate expression for borehole coupling published earlier by the author.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (4-2) ◽  
pp. 470-476
Author(s):  
Kheng Lim Goh ◽  
Ye Seng Chen ◽  
Roy Jia Jun Chua ◽  
Tze Chow Fong ◽  
Yu Ker Woh ◽  
...  

The study of the mechanical properties of materials is important in the design and fabrication of any microscale product. Acquiring information such as the fracture toughness, fatigue limits, ultimate tensile and yield strength of these materials would help to determine the reliability of the final product made using the material. Traditionally, these material properties are obtained via mechanical testing on a macroscale tester such as the machines produced by Instron. However, mechanical testing of ‘softer’ materials with a microscopic size is more complicated as the test procedures and equipment have to address concerns such as clamping and alignment of specimen. Recent advancement in micromachining and micro-manufacturing has resulted in the availability of advanced and affordable instrumentation that can be applied to precisely manipulate the materials at microscopic dimensions; this provides the impetus to the development of microscale mechanical testers to study the micro-elasticity and micro-fracture mechanics of soft materials. The focus of this report is on the development of a micromechanical tester that can be used to study micrometer thick biomaterials and biological tissues. The tester can be mounted onto an X-Y stage of an inverted or compound microscope to observe the microscopic deformation and microfracture of the test specimen during testing. Three case studies are presented here to illustrate the performance of the mechanical tester. These studies address the characterisation of the mechanical properties of the flax fibre, oil palm empty fruit bunch fibre and coir fibre in dry and wet states.


Author(s):  
Arash Mehraban ◽  
Jed Brown ◽  
Valeria Barra ◽  
Henry Tufo ◽  
Jeremy Thompson ◽  
...  

Abstract Soft materials such as rubber, elastomers, and soft biological tissues mechanically deform at large strain isochorically for all time, or during their initial transient (when a pore fluid, typically incompressible such as water, does not have time to flow out of the deforming polymer or soft tissue porous skeleton). Simulating these large isochoric deformations computationally, such as with the Finite Element Method (FEM), requires higher order (typically quadratic) interpolation functions and/or enhancements through hybrid/mixed methods to maintain stability. Lower order (linear) finite elements with hybrid/mixed formulation may not perform stably for all mechanical loading scenarios involving large isochoric deformations, whereas quadratic finite elements with or without hybrid/mixed formulation typically perform stably, especially when large bending or folding deformations are being simulated. For topology-optimization design of soft robotics, for instance, the FEM solid mechanics solver must run efficiently and stably. Stability is ensured by the higher order finite element formulation (with possible enhancement), but efficiency for higher order FEM remains a challenge. Thus, this paper addresses efficiency from the perspective of computer science algorithms and programming. The proposed efficient algorithm utilizes the Portable, Extensible Toolkit for Scientific Computation (PETSc), along with the libCEED library for efficient compiler optimized tensor-product-basis computation to demonstrate an efficient nonlinear solution algorithm. For preconditioning, a scalable p-multigrid method is presented whereby a hierarchy of levels is constructed. In contrast to classical geometric multigrid, also known as h-multigrid, each level in p-multigrid is related to a different approximation polynomial order, p, instead of the element size, h. A Chebyshev polynomial smoother is used on each multigrid level. Algebraic MultiGrid (AMG) is then applied to the assembled Q1 (linear) coarse mesh on the nodes of the quadratic Q2 (quadratic) mesh. This allows low storage that can be efficiently used to accelerate the convergence to solution. For a Neo-Hookean hyperelastic problem, we examine a residual and matrix-free Jacobian formulation of a tri-quadratic hexahedral finite element with enhancement. Efficiency estimates on AVX-2 architecture based on CPU time are provided as a comparison to similar simulation (and mesh) of isochoric large deformation hyperelasticity as applied to soft materials conducted with the commercially-available FEM software program ABAQUS. The particular problem in consideration is the simulation of an assistive device in the form of finger-bending in 3D.


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