Publication | Open Access
Identifying a Minimal Rheological Configuration: A Tool for Effective and Efficient Constitutive Modeling of Soft Tissues
16
Citations
33
References
2011
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringModeling MethodologyBiomedical EngineeringStructural OptimizationComputational MechanicsMechanics ModelingRheological MeasurementMechanicsBiomechanicsRheologySoft TissuesBiomaterial ModelingDeformation ModelingBiophysicsMechanobiologyMechanical ModelingRheology ControlMaterial MechanicsMinimal Rheological ConfigurationMechanical DeformationPorcine LiverRheological Constitutive EquationEfficient Constitutive ModelingRheological PropertyConstitutive ModelingEx Vivo
We describe a modeling methodology intended as a preliminary step in the identification of appropriate constitutive frameworks for the time-dependent response of biological tissues. The modeling approach comprises a customizable rheological network of viscous and elastic elements governed by user-defined 1D constitutive relationships. The model parameters are identified by iterative nonlinear optimization, minimizing the error between experimental and model-predicted structural (load-displacement) tissue response under a specific mode of deformation. We demonstrate the use of this methodology by determining the minimal rheological arrangement, constitutive relationships, and model parameters for the structural response of various soft tissues, including ex vivo perfused porcine liver in indentation, ex vivo porcine brain cortical tissue in indentation, and ex vivo human cervical tissue in unconfined compression. Our results indicate that the identified rheological configurations provide good agreement with experimental data, including multiple constant strain rate load/unload tests and stress relaxation tests. Our experience suggests that the described modeling framework is an efficient tool for exploring a wide array of constitutive relationships and rheological arrangements, which can subsequently serve as a basis for 3D constitutive model development and finite-element implementations. The proposed approach can also be employed as a self-contained tool to obtain simplified 1D phenomenological models of the structural response of biological tissue to single-axis manipulations for applications in haptic technologies.
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