The sclera is a soft tissue primarily consisting of collagen fibers, elastin, and proteoglycans. The proteoglycans are composed of a core protein and negatively charged glycosaminoglycan side chains. The fixed electric charges inside the scleral extracellular matrix play a key role in its swelling and are expected to cause the tissue to deform in response to an electric field. However, the electroactive response of the sclera has not yet been investigated. The present work experimentally demonstrates that sclera behaves similar to an anionic electrosensitive hydrogel and develops a chemo-electro-mechanical (CEM) mathematical framework for its electromechanical response. In the numerical model, a hyperelastic constitutive law with distributed collagen fibers is used to capture the nonlinear mechanical properties of the sclera, and the coupled Poisson-Nernst-Planck equations represent the distribution of mobile ions throughout the domain. After calibrating the proposed numerical CEM model against the experimental measurements, we employ it to investigate the effects of different parameters on the scleral electromechanical response including the voltage and fixed charge density. The experimental and numerical findings of the present study confirm that sclera behaves as an electroactive hydrogel and provide new insight into the mechanical response of this ocular tissue.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10237-022-01590-5 | DOI Listing |
Rev Sci Instrum
December 2024
Manufacturing Engineering Institute, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China.
It is challenging for most existing grippers to accurately measure their contact force when grasping unstructured objects. To address this issue, a novel force sensing model is established. A compliant gripper derived by the topology optimization method is introduced, and its actual deformation is measured without contacting by OpenCV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mech Behav Biomed Mater
November 2024
Philips Innovation & Strategy, Netherlands; Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands. Electronic address:
During intravascular procedures, medical devices interact mechanically with vascular tissue. The device design faces a trade-off: although a high bending stiffness improves its maneuvrability and deliverability, it may also trigger excessive supra-physiological loading that may result in tissue damage. In particular, the collagen fibers in vascular walls are load-bearing but may rupture on a microscopic scale due to mechanical interaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Biol Med
December 2024
Research Center for Mathematics and Interdisciplinary Sciences, Shandong University, Qingdao, 266237, China; Frontiers Science Center for Nonlinear Expectations, Ministry of Education, Qingdao, 266237, China. Electronic address:
Research on venous hemodynamics is pivotal for unravelling venous diseases, including varicose veins and deep vein thrombosis, essential for clinical management, treatment and artificial valve design. In this study, a three-dimensional (3D) numerical simulation, employing the immersed boundary/finite element method, is constructed to explore the fluid-structure interaction (FSI) between intravenous blood and venous valves. A hyperelastic constitutive model is used to capture the incompressible, nonlinear mechanical response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mech Behav Biomed Mater
February 2025
Department of Biological and Chemical Engineering, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark. Electronic address:
Purpose: Oral drug delivery is the Holy Grail in the field of drug delivery. However, poor bioavailability limits the oral intake of macromolecular drugs. Oral devices may overcome this limitation, but a knowledge gap exists on the device-tissue interaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGels
October 2024
Chair of Microfluidics, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Marine Technology, University of Rostock, 18059 Rostock, Germany.
The rubber elasticity theory has been lengthily applied to several polymeric hydrogel substances and upgraded from idealistic models to consider imperfections in the polymer network. The theory relies solely on hyperelastic material models in order to provide a description of the elastic polymer network. While this is also applicable to polymer gels, such hydrogels are rather characterized by their water content and visco-elastic mechanical properties.
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