Wave propagation and energy dissipation of collagen molecules
Mario Milazzo, Gang Seob Jung, Serena Danti, Markus J. Buehler

TL;DR
This study investigates how wave propagation and energy dissipation in collagen molecules depend on hydration and load direction, revealing significant differences that impact tissue mechanics and biomimetic material design.
Contribution
It introduces a bottom-up atomistic modeling approach to analyze wave dynamics in collagen, highlighting the effects of hydration and load orientation on energy dissipation.
Findings
Hydrated collagen dissipates five times more energy than dehydrated.
Wave transmission varies significantly with load direction.
Hydration state influences collagen's mechanical energy dissipation.
Abstract
Collagen is the key protein of connective tissue (i.e., skin, tendons and ligaments, cartilage, among others) accounting for 25% to 35% of the whole-body protein content, and entitled of conferring mechanical stability. This protein is also a fundamental building block of bone due to its excellent mechanical properties together with carbonated hydroxyapatite minerals. While the mechanical resilience and viscoelasticity have been studied both in vitro and in vivo from the molecule to tissue level, wave propagation properties and energy dissipation have not yet been deeply explored, in spite of being crucial to understand the vibration dynamics of collagenous structures (e.g., eardrum, cochlear membranes) upon impulsive loads. By using a bottom-up atomistic modelling approach, here we study a collagen peptide under two distinct impulsive displacement loads, including longitudinal and…
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