Anisotropic swelling due to hydration constrains anisotropic elasticity in biomaterial fibers
Naturally occurring protein fibers often undergo anisotropic swelling when hydrated. Within a tendon, a hydrated collagen fibril’s radius expands by 40% but its length only increases by 5%. The same effect, with a similar relative magnitude, is observed for single hair shafts. Fiber hydration is kno...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials 2024-12, Vol.160, p.106749, Article 106749 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Naturally occurring protein fibers often undergo anisotropic swelling when hydrated. Within a tendon, a hydrated collagen fibril’s radius expands by 40% but its length only increases by 5%. The same effect, with a similar relative magnitude, is observed for single hair shafts. Fiber hydration is known to affect elastic properties. Here we show that anisotropic swelling constrains the anisotropic linear elastic properties of fibers. First we show, using data from disparate previously reported studies, that anisotropic swelling can be described as an approximately linear function of water content. Then, under the observation that the elastic energy of swelling can be minimized by the anisotropic shape, we relate swelling anisotropy to elastic anisotropy — assuming radial (transverse) symmetry within a cylindrical geometry. We find an upper bound for the commonly measured axial Poisson ratio νzx |
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ISSN: | 1751-6161 1878-0180 1878-0180 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2024.106749 |