• Title of article

    Targeting the finite-deformation response of wavy biological tissues with bio-inspired material architectures

  • Author/Authors

    Tu، نويسنده , , Wenqiong and Pindera، نويسنده , , Marek-Jerzy Pindera، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    291
  • To page
    308
  • Abstract
    The Particle Swarm Optimization algorithm driven by a homogenized-based model is employed to target the response of three types of heart-valve chordae tendineae with different stiffening characteristics due to different degrees of waviness of collagen fibril/fiber bundles. First, geometric and material parameters are identified through an extensive parametric study that produce excellent agreement of the simulated response based on simplified unit cell architectures with the actual response of the complex biological tissue. These include amplitude and wavelength of the crimped chordae microstructure, elastic moduli of the constituent phases, and degree of microstructural refinement of the stiff phase at fixed volume fraction whose role in the stiffening response is elucidated. The study also reveals potential non-uniqueness of bio-inspired wavy microstructures in attaining the targeted response of certain chordae tendineae crimp configurations. The homogenization-based Particle Swarm Optimization algorithm, whose predictions are validated through the parametric study, is then shown to be an excellent tool in identifying optimal unit cell architectures in the design space that exhibits very steep gradients. Finally, defect criticality of optimal unit cell architectures is investigated in order to assess their feasibility in replacing actual biological tendons with stiffening characteristics.
  • Keywords
    Wavy microstructures , Finite deformation , Bio-inspired modeling , Micromechanics , Biological tissues
  • Journal title
    Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
  • Record number

    1406145