biaxial mechanical testing
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Author(s):  
Zwelihle Ndlovu ◽  
Dawood Desia ◽  
Fulufhelo Nemavhola ◽  
Harry M Ngwangwa

A better understanding of diseases progress in tissues vest on the accurate understanding of tissues under mechanical loading. Also, development of therapies for injuries may depend on the available mechanical data for soft tissues. In this study, the raw data of biaxial tensile testing of sclera soft tissue is presented in this paper. Biaxial mechanical testing of soft tissues presents details understanding of how soft tissues behave when compared to uniaxial testing. Biomechanical properties of soft tissues are vital in the development of accurate computational models. Reliable computational models of studying mechanisms of diseases depends mainly on the accurate and more details mechanical behavior of soft tissues. These accurate and detailed computational models may be utilized to further develop the understanding and therapies of various diseases. The mechanical tensile testing was conducted on the passive sheep sclera. Engineering stress vs strain of several samples of the sheep sclera are further presented determined from force and displacement experimental data. The goal of this paper is to make available biaxial data of sheep sclera soft tissue that can be further utilized.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
William D Meador ◽  
Gabriella P P Sugerman ◽  
Adrian Buganza Tepole ◽  
Manuel Karl Rausch

The mechanics of collageneous soft tissues, such as skin, are sensitive to heat. Thus, quantifying and modeling thermo-mechanical coupling of skin is critical to our understanding of skin's physiology, pathophysiology, as well as its treatment. However, key gaps persist in our knowledge about skin's coupled thermo-mechanics. Among them, we haven't quantified the role of skin's microstructural organization in its response to superphysiological loading. To fill this gap, we conducted a comprehensive set of experiments in which we combined biaxial mechanical testing with histology and two-photon imaging under liquid heat treatment. Among other observations, we found that unconstrained skin, when exposed to high temperatures, shrinks anisotropically with the principle direction of shrinkage being aligned with collagen's principle orientation. Additionally, we found that when skin is isometrically constrained, it produces significant forces during denaturing that are also anisotropic. Finally, we found that denaturation significantly alters the mechanical behavior of skin. For short exposure times, this alteration is reflected in a reduction of stiffness at high strains. At long exposure times, the tissue softened to a point where it became untestable. We supplemented our findings with confirmation of collagen denaturation in skin via loss of birefringence and second harmonic generation. Finally, we captured all time-, temperature-, and direction-dependent experimental findings in a hypothetical model. Thus, this work fills a fundamental gap in our current understanding of skin thermo-mechanics and will support future developments in thermal injury prevention, thermal injury management, and thermal therapeutics of skin.


Machines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 40
Author(s):  
António B. Pereira ◽  
Fábio A.O. Fernandes ◽  
Alfredo B. de Morais ◽  
João Maio

Biaxial mechanical testing gained increased importance for characterization of materials that present anisotropic behavior and/or different responses when subjected to tensile and compression loadings. In this work, a new biaxial testing machine was developed. The various systems and components were designed, manufactured, assembled, and assessed. Uniaxial tensile tests were performed to validate the device, showing results consistent with those obtained on a universal testing machine. Finally, biaxial tensile tests were also performed on polypropylene cruciform specimens. The results revealed high precision levels, thus showing the potential of this new machine.


2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (156) ◽  
pp. 20190069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colton J. Ross ◽  
Devin W. Laurence ◽  
Jacob Richardson ◽  
Anju R. Babu ◽  
Lauren E. Evans ◽  
...  

The atrioventricular heart valve (AHV) leaflets have a complex microstructure composed of four distinct layers: atrialis, ventricularis, fibrosa and spongiosa. Specifically, the spongiosa layer is primarily proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Quantification of the GAGs' mechanical contribution to the overall leaflet function has been of recent focus for aortic valve leaflets, but this characterization has not been reported for the AHV leaflets. This study seeks to expand current GAG literature through novel mechanical characterizations of GAGs in AHV leaflets. For this characterization, mitral and tricuspid valve anterior leaflets (MVAL and TVAL, respectively) were: (i) tested by biaxial mechanical loading at varying loading ratios and by stress-relaxation procedures, (ii) enzymatically treated for removal of the GAGs and (iii) biaxially mechanically tested again under the same protocols as in step (i). Removal of the GAG contents from the leaflet was conducted using a 100 min enzyme treatment to achieve approximate 74.87% and 61.24% reductions of all GAGs from the MVAL and TVAL, respectively. Our main findings demonstrated that biaxial mechanical testing yielded a statistically significant difference in tissue extensibility after GAG removal and that stress-relaxation testing revealed a statistically significant smaller stress decay of the enzyme-treated tissue than untreated tissues. These novel findings illustrate the importance of GAGs in AHV leaflet behaviour, which can be employed to better inform heart valve therapeutics and computational models.


2019 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 205-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marzio Di Giuseppe ◽  
Gioacchino Alotta ◽  
Valentina Agnese ◽  
Diego Bellavia ◽  
Giuseppe M. Raffa ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (152) ◽  
pp. 20190028 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaodan Shi ◽  
Yue Liu ◽  
Katherine M. Copeland ◽  
Sara R. McMahan ◽  
Song Zhang ◽  
...  

The heart epicardial layer, with elastin as the dominant component, has not been well investigated, specifically on how it contributes to ventricular biomechanics. In this study, we revealed and quantitatively assessed the overall status of prestraining and residual stresses exerted by the epicardial layer on the heart left ventricle (LV). During porcine heart wall dissection, we discovered that bi-layered LV surface strips, consisting of an epicardial layer and cardiac muscle, always curled towards the epicardial side due to epicardial residual stresses. We hence developed a curling angle characterization technique to intuitively and qualitatively reveal the location-dependency and direction-dependency of epicardial residual stresses. Moreover, by combining prestrain measurement and biaxial mechanical testing, we were able to quantify the epicardial prestrains and residual stresses on the unpressurized intact LV. To investigate the potential mechanical effect of epicardial prestraining, a finite-element (FE) model has been constructed, and we demonstrate that it is the prestraining of the epicardial layer, not the epicardial layer alone, providing an additional resistance mechanism during LV diastolic expansion and ventricular wall protection by reducing myocardial stress. In short, our study on healthy, native porcine hearts has revealed an important phenomenon—the epicardial layer, rich in elastin, acts like a prestrained ‘balloon’ that wraps around the heart and functions as an extra confinement and protection interface. The obtained knowledge fills a gap in ventricular biomechanics and will help design novel biomimicking materials or prosthetic devices to target the maintenance/recreation of this ventricle confinement interface.


2015 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 1029-1042 ◽  
Author(s):  
Choon Hwai Yap ◽  
Dae Woo Park ◽  
Debaditya Dutta ◽  
Marc Simon ◽  
Kang Kim

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