Continuum elastic models for force transmissions in biopolymer gels
Haiqin Wang, Xinpeng Xu

TL;DR
This paper reviews continuum elastic models for force transmission in biopolymer gels, focusing on small deformations, and relates them to experiments, providing analytical insights and discussing limitations and future directions.
Contribution
It offers a systematic continuum approach to modeling force transmission in biopolymer gels, including analytical predictions and connections to experimental results.
Findings
Simple 3-chain model fits shear experiments well.
Identifies scaling regimes for cell-induced displacements.
Unified continuum theory explains long-range cell interactions.
Abstract
We review continuum elastic models for the transmission of both external forces and internal active cellular forces in biopolymer gels, and relate them to recent experiments. Rather than being exhaustive, we focus on continuum elastic models for small affine deformations and intend to provide a systematic continuum method and some analytical perspectives to the study of force transmissions in biopolymer gels. We start from a very brief review of the nonlinear mechanics of individual biopolymers and a summary of constitutive models for the nonlinear elasticity of biopolymer gels. We next show that the simple 3-chain model can give predictions that well fit the shear experiments of some biopolymer gels, including the effects of strain-stiffening and negative normal stress. We then review continuum models for the transmission of internal active forces that are induced by a spherically…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Physical and Chemical Molecular Interactions · Advanced Theoretical and Applied Studies in Material Sciences and Geometry
