An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation

Indentation is a primary tool in the investigation of the mechanical properties of very soft tissue such as the brain. However, the usual material characterization protocols are not applicable because the resulting deformation is inhomogeneous, with even the identification of the amount of strain am...

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Main Authors: D. B. MacManus, M. D. Gilchrist, J. G. Murphy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170894
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spelling doaj-475c8ae41ff646028cc985092d8d30a62020-11-25T04:02:08ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-0141110.1098/rsos.170894170894An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentationD. B. MacManusM. D. GilchristJ. G. MurphyIndentation is a primary tool in the investigation of the mechanical properties of very soft tissue such as the brain. However, the usual material characterization protocols are not applicable because the resulting deformation is inhomogeneous, with even the identification of the amount of strain ambiguous and uncertain. Focusing on spherical indentation only, a standard is needed to quantify the amount of strain in terms of the probe radius and displacement so that different indentation experiments can be compared and contrasted. It is shown here that the minimum axial value of the Eulerian logarithmic strain tensor has many desirable properties of such a standard, such as invariance under the choice of material model, and experimental conditions for a given probe displacement. The disadvantage of this measure is that sophisticated finite element techniques need to be used in its determination. An empirical relation is obtained between this strain and the probe radius and displacement to circumvent this problem, and it is shown that this relationship is an excellent predictor of the strain measure. Two essential features of this empirical measure for nonlinear strains are that the exact strain measure for the linear theory is recovered on restriction to infinitesimal deformations and that the simulations use models based on reliable and accurate indentation data obtained from freshly harvested murine brains using a bespoke micro-indentation device.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170894brain tissuestrain measuresfinite-element simulations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D. B. MacManus
M. D. Gilchrist
J. G. Murphy
spellingShingle D. B. MacManus
M. D. Gilchrist
J. G. Murphy
An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
Royal Society Open Science
brain tissue
strain measures
finite-element simulations
author_facet D. B. MacManus
M. D. Gilchrist
J. G. Murphy
author_sort D. B. MacManus
title An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
title_short An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
title_full An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
title_fullStr An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
title_full_unstemmed An empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
title_sort empirical measure of nonlinear strain for soft tissue indentation
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Indentation is a primary tool in the investigation of the mechanical properties of very soft tissue such as the brain. However, the usual material characterization protocols are not applicable because the resulting deformation is inhomogeneous, with even the identification of the amount of strain ambiguous and uncertain. Focusing on spherical indentation only, a standard is needed to quantify the amount of strain in terms of the probe radius and displacement so that different indentation experiments can be compared and contrasted. It is shown here that the minimum axial value of the Eulerian logarithmic strain tensor has many desirable properties of such a standard, such as invariance under the choice of material model, and experimental conditions for a given probe displacement. The disadvantage of this measure is that sophisticated finite element techniques need to be used in its determination. An empirical relation is obtained between this strain and the probe radius and displacement to circumvent this problem, and it is shown that this relationship is an excellent predictor of the strain measure. Two essential features of this empirical measure for nonlinear strains are that the exact strain measure for the linear theory is recovered on restriction to infinitesimal deformations and that the simulations use models based on reliable and accurate indentation data obtained from freshly harvested murine brains using a bespoke micro-indentation device.
topic brain tissue
strain measures
finite-element simulations
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170894
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