4.8 Article

Biaxial mechanics of thermally denaturing skin- Part 2: Modeling

期刊

ACTA BIOMATERIALIA
卷 140, 期 -, 页码 421-433

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2021.11.031

关键词

Constitutive modeling; Nonlinear mechanics; Viscoelasticity; Damage mechanics; Soft tissue; Microstructure modeling; Anisotropy; Arrhenius kinetics

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [1916663]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1916663] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Understanding the response of skin to superphysiological temperatures is crucial for the diagnosis, prognosis, and development of thermal therapies. This study explores the complex interdependence of time, temperature, direction, and load in skin's response to superphysiological temperatures. Two models are proposed to explain the observations, both based on the denaturation of the collagen microstructure. The success of these models provides guidance for future experiments and the engineering design of heat treatment therapies.
Understanding the response of skin to superphysiological temperatures is critical to the diagnosis and prognosis of thermal injuries, and to the development of temperature-based medical therapeutics. Unfortunately, this understanding has been hindered by our incomplete knowledge about the nonlinear coupling between skin temperature and its mechanics. In Part I of this study we experimentally demonstrated a complex interdependence of time, temperature, direction, and load in skin's response to superphysiological temperatures. In Part II of our study, we test two different models of skin's thermomechanics to explain our observations. In both models we assume that skin's response to superphysiological temperatures is governed by the denaturation of its highly collageneous microstructure. Thus, we capture skin's native mechanics via a microstructurally-motivated strain energy function which includes probability distributions for collagen fiber orientation and waviness. In the first model, we capture skin's response to superphysiological temperatures as a transition between two states that link the kinetics of collagen fiber denaturation to fiber coiling and to the transformation of each fiber's constitutive behavior from purely elastic to viscoelastic. In the second model, we capture skin's response to superphysiological temperatures instead via three states in which a sequence of two reactions link the kinetics of collagen fiber denaturation to fiber coiling, followed by a state of fiber damage. Given the success of both models in qualitatively and quantitatively capturing our observations, we expect that our work will provide guidance for future experiments that could probe each model's assumptions toward a better understanding of skin's coupled thermo-mechanics and that our work will be used to guide the engineering design of heat treatment therapies. Statement of significance Quantifying and modeling skin thermo-mechanics is critical to our understanding of skin physiology, pathophysiology, as well as heat-based treatments. This work addresses a lack of theoretical and computational models of the coupled thermo-mechanics of skin. Our model accounts for skin microstructure through modeling the probability of fiber orientation and fiber stress-free states. Denaturing induces changes in the stress-free configuration of collagen, as well as changes in fiber stiffness and viscoelastic properties. We propose two competing models that fit all of our experimental observations. These models will enable future developments of thermal-therapeutics, prevention and management of skin thermal injuries, and set a foundation for improved mechanistic models of skin thermo-mechanics. (c) 2021 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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