Poroelasticity of (bio)polymer networks during compression: theory and experiment
Melle T.J.J.M. Punter, Bart E. Vos, Bela M. Mulder, Gijsje H., Koenderink

TL;DR
This study combines experiments and theory to determine the hydraulic permeability and elastic properties of biopolymer networks like fibrin during compression, revealing strain rate effects and pore size-dependent behaviors.
Contribution
It introduces a simple experimental method and theoretical model to measure poroelastic properties of biopolymer networks using ramp compression in a rheometer.
Findings
Normal force response combines network stress and fluid pressure.
Fibrin networks exhibit strain-stiffening depending on pore size.
Permeability scales inversely with fibrin concentration.
Abstract
Soft living tissues like cartilage can be considered as biphasic materials comprised of a fibrous complex biopolymer network and a viscous background liquid. Here, we show by a combination of experiment and theoretical analysis that both the hydraulic permeability and the elastic properties of (bio)polymer networks can be determined with simple ramp compression experiments in a commercial rheometer. In our approximate closed-form solution of the poroelastic equations of motion, we find the normal force response during compression as a combination of network stress and fluid pressure. Choosing fibrin as a biopolymer model system with controllable pore size, measurements of the full time-dependent normal force during compression are found to be in excellent agreement with the theoretical calculations. The inferred elastic response of large-pore () fibrin networks depends…
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