Determination of Friction Coefficient in Unconfined Compression of Brain Tissue
Badar Rashid, Michel Destrade, Michael Gilchrist

TL;DR
This study estimates the dynamic friction coefficient in unconfined compression tests of porcine brain tissue using experimental and computational methods, revealing its dependence on strain rate and test conditions, which aids in accurate mechanical property assessment.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive estimation of the dynamic friction coefficient for brain tissue across various strain rates and conditions, improving test reliability.
Findings
Friction coefficient increases with strain rate.
Friction coefficient varies with lubricant and contact conditions.
Results aid in more accurate brain tissue mechanical testing.
Abstract
Unconfined compression tests are more convenient to perform on cylindrical samples of brain tissue than tensile tests in order to estimate mechanical properties of the brain tissue because they allow for homogeneous deformations. The reliability of these tests depends significantly on the amount of friction generated at the specimen/platen interface. Thus, there is a crucial need to find an approximate value of the friction coefficient in order to predict a possible overestimation of stresses during unconfined compression tests. In this study, a combined experimental-computational approach was adopted to estimate the dynamic friction coefficient mu of porcine brain matter against metal platens in compressive tests. Cylindrical samples of porcine brain tissue were tested up to 30% strain at variable strain rates, both under bonded and lubricated conditions in the same controlled…
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