Title: Nonlinear Elasticity of Soft Tissues
1Nonlinear Elasticity of Soft Tissues
- Soft tissues are not elastic stress depends on
strain and the history of strain - However, the hysteresis loop is only weakly
dependent on strain rate - It may be reasonable to assume that tissues in
vivo are preconditioned - Fung elasticity may be suitable for soft
tissues, if we use a different stress-strain
relation for loading and unloading the
pseudoelasticity concept - a rationale for applying elasticity theory to
soft tissues - Unlike in bone, linear elasticity is
inappropriate for soft tissues we need nonlinear
finite elasticity
2Two Definitions of Elasticity
The work done by the stress producing strain in a
hyper-elastic material is stored as potential
energy in a thermo-dynamically reversible process.
In words
In an elastic material the stress depends only on
the strain.
Mathematically
Example
W is also called the strain energy
A linearly elastic (Hookean) material
3Conservation of Energy
Rate of change Rate of Work Rate of Heat of
Internal Energy Done by Stresses Absorbed
4Strain Energy
- W is the strain-energy function its derivative
with respect to the strain is the stress. - This is equivalent to saying that the stress in a
hyperelastic material is independent of the path
or history of deformation. - Similarly, when a force vector field is the
gradient of a scalar energy function, the forces
are said to be conservative they work they do
around a closed path is zero. - The strain energy in an elastic material is
stored as internal energy or free energy (related
to entropy)
5Reversible Process
For a reversible process, the internal entropy is
constant and the change in total entropy change
in external entropy
- Elastic stress arises from an increase in
internal energy I or a decrease in specific
entropy S with respect to strain strain energy
is stored as either or both of these - Crystalline materials (e.g. collagen) derive
stress from an increase in the internal energy
between their bonds, and strain energy is
equivalent to rI (a perfect material) - Rubbery materials (e.g. elastin) derive stress
from a decrease in entropy, and strain-energy is
equivalent to rF where F I - qS is called the
Helmholtz Specific Free Energy
6Cauchy Stress Tensor is Eulerian
Tij is the component in the xj direction of the
traction vector t(n) acting on the face normal to
the xi axis in the deformed state of the body.
The "true" stress.
7Lagrangian Stress Tensors
The (half) Lagrangian Nominal stress tensor S
SRj is the component in the xj direction of the
traction measured per unit reference area acting
on the surface normal to the (undeformed) XR
axis. Useful experimentally S detF.F-1.T ? ST
The symmetric (fully) Lagrangian Second
Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensor
- Useful mathematically but no direct physical
interpretation - For small strains differences between T, P, S
disappear
8Example Uniaxial Stress
undeformed length L undeformed area
A deformed length l deformed area a
Cauchy Stress
Nominal Stress
Second Piola-Kirchhoff Stress
9Hyperelastic Constitutive Law for Finite
Deformations
Second Piola-Kirchhoff Stress
Cauchy Stress
102-D ExampleExponential Strain-Energy Function
Stress components have interactions
113-D Orthotropic Exponential Strain-Energy Function
From Choung CJ, Fung YC. On residual stress in
arteries. J Biomech Eng 1986108189-192
122-D Orthotropic Logarithmic Strain-Energy Function
From Takamizawa K, Hayashi K. Strain energy
density function and uniform strain hypothesis
for arterial mechanics. J Biomech 1987207-17
13Isotropic Strain-Energy Functions
Let, W W (I1, I2, I3) where, I1, I2, I3 are the
principal invariants of CRS
In component notation
14Examples Isotropic Laws
15Examples Anisotropic 2-D Laws
16Transversely Isotropic Laws for Myocardium
17Exponential Law for Mitral Valve Leaflets
May-Newman K, Yin FC. A constitutive law for
mitral valve tissue. J Biomech Eng
1998120(1)38-47.
18Examples 3-D Orthotropic Laws
19Incompressible Materials
Stress is not completely determined by the strain
because a hydrostatic pressure can be added to
Tij without changing CRS. The extra condition is
the kinematic incompressibility constraint
To avoid derivative of W tending to ?
p is a Lagrange multiplier (a negative stress)
20Nonlinear Elasticity Summary of Key Points
- Soft tissues have nonlinear material properties
- Because strain-rate effects are modest, soft
tissues can be approximated as elastic
pseudoelasticity - Strain energy W relates stress to strain in a
hyperelastic material it arises from changes in
internal energy or entropy with loading - For finite deformations it is more convenient to
use the Lagrangian Second Piola-Kirchhoff stress - Exponential strain-energy functions are common
for soft tissues - For isotropic materials, W is a function of the
principal strain invariants - Transverse isotropy and orthotropy introduce
additional invariants - For incompressible materials an additional
pressure enters