Organic and inorganic equivalent models for analysis of red blood cell mechanical behaviour.

Finite similitude Hyper-elastic constitutive equations Red blood cells Rubbers Scaling

Journal

Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials
ISSN: 1878-0180
Titre abrégé: J Mech Behav Biomed Mater
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 101322406

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
12 2021
Historique:
received: 09 06 2021
revised: 18 09 2021
accepted: 26 09 2021
pubmed: 9 10 2021
medline: 3 11 2021
entrez: 8 10 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Experimental investigation into the mechanical response of red blood cells is presently impeded with the main impediments being the micro dimensions involved and ethical issues associated with in vivo testing. The widely employed alternative approach of computational modelling suffers from its own inherent limitations being reliant on precise constitutive and boundary information. Moreover, and somewhat critically, numerical computational models themselves are required to be validated by means of experimentation and hence suffer similar impediments. An alternative experimental approach is examined in this paper involving large-scale equivalent models manufactured principally from inorganic, and to lesser extent organic, materials. Although there presently exists no known method providing the means to investigate the mechanical response of red blood cells using scaled models simultaneously having different dimensions and materials, the present paper aims to develop a scaled framework based on the new finite-similitude theory that has appeared in the recent open literature. Computational models are employed to test the effectiveness of the proposed method, which in principle can provide experimental solution methods to a wide range of practical applications including the design of red-blood cell nanorobots and drug delivery systems. By means of experimentally validated numerical experiments under impact loading it is revealed that although exact prediction is not achieved good accuracy can nevertheless be obtained. Furthermore, it is demonstrated how the proposed approach for first time provides a means to relate models at different scales founded on different constitutive equations.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34624833
pii: S1751-6161(21)00505-1
doi: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2021.104868
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

104868

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Seid Mohammad Atifeh (SM)

Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Guilan, P.O. Box 3756, Rasht, Iran.

Keith Davey (K)

Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, The University of Manchester, UK.

Hamed Sadeghi (H)

Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Guilan, P.O. Box 3756, Rasht, Iran.

Rooholamin Darvizeh (R)

Department of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, The University of Manchester, UK. Electronic address: rooholamin.darvizeh@manchester.ac.uk.

Abolfazl Darvizeh (A)

Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Guilan, P.O. Box 3756, Rasht, Iran.

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Classifications MeSH