Nonlinear Inclusion Theory with Application to the Growth and Morphogenesis of a Confined Body
Jian Li, Mrityunjay Kothari, Chockalingam Senthilnathan, Thomas, Henzel, Qiuting Zhang, Xuanhe Li, Jing Yan, Tal Cohen

TL;DR
This paper extends nonlinear inclusion theory to large deformations, using experimental biofilm growth observations and theoretical models to understand morphogenesis and damage in confined materials.
Contribution
It introduces a new nonlinear inclusion model validated by biofilm experiments, revealing shape optimization and damage onset during growth.
Findings
Biofilm growth causes four orders of magnitude size increase.
Theoretical models predict natural growth paths and shape optimization.
Damage initiation correlates with biofilm confinement and growth.
Abstract
One of the most celebrated contributions to the study of the mechanical behavior of materials is due to J.D. Eshelby, who in the late 50s revolutionized our understanding of the elastic stress and strain fields due to an ellipsoidal inclusion/inhomogeneity that undergoes a transformation of shape and size. While Eshelby's work laid the foundation for significant advancements in various fields, including fracture mechanics, theory of phase transitions, and homogenization methods, its extension into the range of large deformations, and to situations in which the material can actively reorganize in response to the finite transformation strain, is in a nascent state. Beyond the theoretical difficulties imposed by highly nonlinear material response, a major hindrance has been the absence of experimental observations that can elucidate the intricacies that arise in this regime. To address…
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