Water-filled porous structures are ubiquitous components in life sciences and engineering. At sufficiently low temperatures, the water inside the porous structures can freeze, triggering the frost heave effect and causing problems such as permafrost, frost damage, and frostbite. In this study, we report a unique pattern of frost heat release through periodic bulging and bursting at the end of a water column inside a capillary tube.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelective ablation of cancer cells by ultrasound would be transformative for cancer therapy, but has not yet been possible. A key challenge is that cancerous and non-cancerous cells typically have similar acoustic impedance and are thus indistinguishable as materials in their responses to ultrasound. However, in certain cancers, cytoskeletal and nuclear lamin structures differ between healthy and malignant cells, opening the possibility of exploiting structural differences that manifest as different vibrational responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe double-bag theory in modern anatomy suggests that structures with coatings are commonly found in human body at various length scales, such as osteocyte processes covered by pericellular matrix and bones covered by muscle tissue. To understand the mechanical behaviors and physiological responses of such biological structures, we develop an analytical model to quantify surface effects on the deformation of a coated cylindrical compressible liquid inclusion in an elastic matrix subjected to remote loading. Our analytical solution reveals that coating can either amplify or attenuate the volumetric strain of the inclusion, depending on the relative elastic moduli of inclusion, coating, and matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPorous materials with sound absorption and load-bearing capabilities are in demand in engineering fields like aviation and rail transportation. However, achieving both properties simultaneously is challenging due to the trade-off between interconnected pores for sound absorption and mechanical strength. Inspired by quilling art, a novel design using spiral material formed by rolling planar materials into helical structures is proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiquid-filled capillary tubes are a kind of standard component in life science (e.g., blood vessels, interstitial pores, and plant vessels) and engineering (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDynamically evolving adhesions between cells and extracellular matrix (ECM) transmit time-varying signals that control cytoskeletal dynamics and cell fate. Dynamic cell adhesion and ECM stiffness regulate cellular mechanosensing cooperatively, but it has not previously been possible to characterize their individual effects because of challenges with controlling these factors independently. Therefore, a DNA-driven molecular system is developed wherein the integrin-binding ligand RGD can be reversibly presented and removed to achieve cyclic cell attachment/detachment on substrates of defined stiffness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
October 2023
Inspired by material hybrid design, novel hybrid sandwich shells were developed by filling a corrugated cylindrical structure with aluminum foam to achieve higher energy absorption performance. The crushing behavior of the foam-filled corrugated sandwich cylindrical shells (FFCSCSs) was investigated using theoretical and numerical methods. Numerical results revealed a significant enhancement in the energy absorption of FFCSCSs under axial compression, showcasing a maximum specific energy absorption of 60 kJ/kg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThin structural elements such as large-scale covering plates of aerospace protection structures and vertical stabilizers of aircraft are strongly influenced by gravity (and/or acceleration); thus, exploring how the mechanical behaviors of such structures are affected by gravitational field is necessary. Built upon a zigzag displacement model, this study establishes a three-dimensional vibration theory for ultralight cellular-cored sandwich plates subjected to linearly varying in-plane distributed loads (due to, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanotherapy is proposed as a new option for cancer treatment. Increasing evidence suggests that characteristic differences are present in the nuclear mechanics and mechanotransduction of cancer cells compared with those of normal cells. Recent advances in understanding nuclear mechanics and mechanotransduction provide not only further insights into the process of malignant transformation but also useful references for developing new therapeutic approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain tissue is considered to be biphasic, with approximately 80% liquid and 20% solid matrix, thus exhibiting viscoelasticity due to rearrangement of the solid matrix and poroelasticity due to fluid migration within the solid matrix. However, how to distinguish poroelastic and viscoelastic effects in brain tissue remains challenging. In this study, we proposed a method of unconfined compression-isometric hold to measure the force versus time relaxation curves of porcine brain tissue samples with systematically varied sample lengths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring mesenchymal development, the sources of mechanical forces transduced by cells transition over time from predominantly cell-cell interactions to predominantly cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions. Transduction of the associated mechanical signals is critical for development, but how these signals converge to regulate human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) mechanosensing is not fully understood, in part because time-evolving mechanical signals cannot readily be presented in vitro. Here, we established a DNA-driven cell culture platform that could be programmed to present the RGD peptide from fibronectin, mimicking cell-ECM interactions, and the HAVDI peptide from N-cadherin, mimicking cell-cell interactions, through DNA hybridization and toehold-mediated strand displacement reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mech Behav Biomed Mater
November 2022
Blockage of ureter caused by kidney stone, accompanied by severe pain/infections, is a high incidence urinary tract disease that has received extensive attention. Currently, in clinics, a kidney stone with diameter less than ∼5 mm is considered capable of passing through ureter. However, this critical size (∼5 mm) is empirically based, lacking quantitative analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcoustic transduction by plants has been proposed as a mechanism to enable just-in-time up-regulation of metabolically expensive defensive compounds. Although the mechanisms by which this "hearing" occurs are unknown, mechanosensation by elongated plant hair cells known as trichomes is suspected. To evaluate this possibility, we developed a theoretical model to evaluate the acoustic radiation force that an elongated cylinder can receive in response to sounds emitted by animals, including insect herbivores, and applied it to the long, cylindrical stem trichomes of the tomato plant Solanum lycopersicum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring descent, a single-winged maple seed (samara) can naturally reach a delicate equilibrium state, stable autorotation, before landing. This article reveals the intrinsic equilibrium of a particular type of samaras in terms of measurable aerodynamic and geometric parameters. To this end, we conducted a series of in situ measurements for the rate of vertical descent (exclusive of crosswind) of an autorotating samara in a natural range of samara sizes and masses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanical deformation of human skin provides essential information about human motions, muscle stretching, vocal fold vibration, and heart rates. Monitoring these activities requires the measurement of strains at different levels. Herein, we report a wearable wide-range strain sensor based on conducting polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMesenchymal stem cells adopt differentiation pathways based upon cumulative effects of mechanosensing. A cell's mechanical microenvironment changes substantially over the course of development, beginning from the early stages in which cells are typically surrounded by other cells and continuing through later stages in which cells are typically surrounded by extracellular matrix. How cells erase the memory of some of these mechanical microenvironments while locking in memory of others is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLiquid-filled porous materials exist widely in nature and engineering fields, with the diffusion of substances in them playing an important role in system functions. Although surface evaporation is often inevitable in practical scenarios, the evaporation effects on diffusion behavior in liquid-filled porous materials have not been well explored yet. In this work, we performed noninvasive diffusion imaging experiments to observe the diffusion process of erioglaucine disodium salt dye in a liquid-filled nitrocellulose membrane under a wide range of relative humidities (RHs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough coupling between cardiomyocytes and myofibroblasts is well known to affect the physiology and pathophysiology of cardiac tissues across species, relating these observations to humans is challenging because the effect of this coupling varies across species and because the sources of these effects are not known. To identify the sources of cross-species variation, we built upon previous mathematical models of myofibroblast electrophysiology and developed a mechanoelectrical model of cardiomyocyte-myofibroblast interactions as mediated by electrotonic coupling and transforming growth factor-β1. The model, as verified by experimental data from the literature, predicted that both electrotonic coupling and transforming growth factor-β1 interaction between myocytes and myofibroblast prolonged action potential in rat myocytes but shortened action potential in human myocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMacromol Rapid Commun
July 2021
Hydrogels are commonly doped with stiff nanoscale fillers to endow them with the strength and stiffness needed for engineering applications. Although structure-property relations for many polymer matrix nanocomposites are well established, modeling the new generation of hydrogel nanocomposites requires the study of processing-structure-property relationships because subtle differences in chemical kinetics during their synthesis can cause nearly identical hydrogels to have dramatically different mechanical properties. The authors therefore assembled a framework to relate synthesis conditions (including hydrogel and nanofiller mechanical properties and light absorbance) to gelation kinetics and mechanical properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJanus particles with asymmetric crystals show great importance in optoelectronics and photocatalysis, but their synthesis usually requires complicated procedures. Here, an unexpected Janus vitrification phenomenon is observed in a droplet caused by the Leidenfrost effect at a cryogenic temperature, which is commonly regarded as symmetric. The Leidenfrost phenomenon levitates the droplet when it comes in contact with liquid nitrogen causing different cooling conditions on the droplet's top and bottom surfaces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatural extracellular matrix (ECM) mostly has a fibrous structure that supports and mechanically interacts with local residing cells to guide their behaviors. The effect of ECM elasticity on cell behaviors has been extensively investigated, while less attention has been paid to the effect of matrix fiber-network plasticity at microscale, although plastic remodeling of fibrous matrix is a common phenomenon in fibrosis. Here, a significant decrease is found in plasticity of native fibrotic tissues, which is associated with an increase in matrix crosslinking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltralight sandwich constructions with corrugated channel cores (i.e., periodic fluid-through wavy passages) are envisioned to possess multifunctional attributes: simultaneous load-carrying and heat dissipation via active cooling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlow of fluids within biological tissues often meets with resistance that causes a rate- and size-dependent material behavior known as poroelasticity. Characterizing poroelasticity can provide insight into a broad range of physiological functions, and is done qualitatively in the clinic by palpation. Indentation has been widely used for characterizing poroelasticity of soft materials, where quantitative interpretation of indentation requires a model of the underlying physics, and such existing models are well established for cases of small strain and modest force relaxation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotoresponsive hydrogels (PRHs) are soft materials whose mechanical and chemical properties can be tuned spatially and temporally with relative ease. Both photo-crosslinkable and photodegradable hydrogels find utility in a range of biomedical applications that require tissue-like properties or programmable responses. Progress in engineering with PRHs is facilitated by the development of theoretical tools that enable optimization of their photochemistry, polymer matrices, nanofillers, and architecture.
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