Strain stiffening universality in composite hydrogels and soft tissues
Jake Song, Elad Deiss-Yehiely, Serra Yesilata, Gareth H. McKinley

TL;DR
This study reveals that composite hydrogels and tissues exhibit universal strain stiffening in shear and compression driven by polymer chain stretching, with the effects masked by dissipation from filler-polymer interactions, advancing understanding of tissue mechanics.
Contribution
It introduces a method to isolate and characterize the intrinsic non-linear elastic stiffening in composite tissues, revealing universal behavior dependent on filler properties.
Findings
Strain stiffening in shear and compression is governed by universal amplification factors.
Filler-polymer interactions cause strain softening that masks true stiffening behavior.
A new experimental approach isolates elastic stiffening from dissipative effects.
Abstract
Soft biological tissues exhibit a remarkable resilience to large mechanical loads, a property which is associated with the strain stiffening capability of the biopolymer networks that structurally support the tissues. Yet, recent studies have shown that composite systems such as tissues and blood clots exhibit mechanical properties that contradict those of the polymer matrix - demonstrating stiffening in compression, but softening in shear and tension. The microscopic basis of this apparent paradox remains poorly understood. We show that composite hydrogels and tissues do indeed exhibit non-linear elastic stiffening in shear - which is governed by the stretching of the polymer chains in the matrix - and that it is driven by the same mechanism that drives compression stiffening. However, we show that the non-linear elastic stiffening in composite hydrogels and tissues is masked by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Elasticity and Material Modeling · Connective tissue disorders research
