Title of article :
Exploring the mechanical behavior of degrading swine neural tissue at low strain rates via the fractional Zener constitutive model
Author/Authors :
D.E. Bentil، نويسنده , , Sarah A. and Dupaix، نويسنده , , Rebecca B.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
The ability of the fractional Zener constitutive model to predict the behavior of postmortem swine brain tissue was examined in this work. Understanding tissue behavior attributed to degradation is invaluable in many fields such as the forensic sciences or cases where only cadaveric tissue is available. To understand how material properties change with postmortem age, the fractional Zener model was considered as it includes parameters to describe brain stiffness and also the parameter α, which quantifies the viscoelasticity of a material. The relationship between the viscoelasticity described by α and tissue degradation was examined by fitting the model to data collected in a previous study (Bentil, 2013). This previous study subjected swine neural tissue to in vitro unconfined compression tests using four postmortem age groups (<6 h, 24 h, 3 days, and 1 week). All samples were compressed to a strain level of 10% using two compressive rates: 1 mm/min and 5 mm/min. Statistical analysis was used as a tool to study the influence of the fractional Zener constants on factors such as tissue degradation and compressive rate. Application of the fractional Zener constitutive model to the experimental data showed that swine neural tissue becomes less stiff with increased postmortem age. The fractional Zener model was also able to capture the nonlinear viscoelastic features of the brain tissue at low strain rates. The results showed that the parameter α was better correlated with compressive rate than with postmortem age.
Keywords :
Degradation , Viscoelasticity , Fractional Zener , Constitutive model , brain tissue , ANOVA
Journal title :
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
Journal title :
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials