A model of engineering materials inspired by biological tissues
Files
Date issued
2009
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of West Bohemia
Abstract
The perfect ability of living tissues to control and adapt their mechanical properties to varying external conditions
may be an inspiration for designing engineering materials. An interesting example is the smooth muscle tissue
since this “material” is able to change its global mechanical properties considerably by a subtle mechanism within
individual muscle cells. Multi-scale continuum models may be useful in designing essentially simpler engineering
materials having similar properties. As an illustration we present the model of an incompressible material whose
microscopic structure is formed by flexible, soft but incompressible balls connected mutually by linear springs.
This simple model, however, shows a nontrivial nonlinear behavior caused by the incompressibility of balls and is
very sensitive on some microscopic parameters. It may elucidate the way by which “small” changes in biopolymer
networks within individualmuscular cells may control the stiffness of the biological tissue, which outlines a way of
designing similar engineering materials. The ‘balls and springs’ material presents also prestress-induced stiffening
and allows elucidating a contribution of extracellular fluids into the tissue’s viscous properties.
Description
Subject(s)
aplikovaná mechanika, hladké svalstvo, živé tkáně, viskoelasticita, cytoskelet
Citation
Applied and Computational Mechanics. 2009, vol. 3, no. 2, p. 275-286.