Publication | Open Access
Creep and Fracture of a Protein Gel under Stress
111
Citations
39
References
2014
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringSoft MatterWork HardeningRheological MeasurementElasticity (Physics)MechanicsRheologyProtein GelBiophysicsLinear ViscoelasticitySolid MechanicsMechanical DeformationBiopolymer GelRheological Constitutive EquationRheological PropertyPolysaccharide GelsCrack FormationMechanics Of Materials
Biomaterials such as protein or polysaccharide gels are known to behave qualitatively as soft solids and to rupture under an external load. Combining optical and ultrasonic imaging to shear rheology we show that the failure scenario of a protein gel is reminiscent of brittle solids: after a primary creep regime characterized by a power-law behavior whose exponent is fully accounted for by linear viscoelasticity, fractures nucleate and grow logarithmically perpendicularly to shear, up to the sudden rupture of the gel. A single equation accounting for those two successive processes nicely captures the full rheological response. The failure time follows a decreasing power law with the applied shear stress, similar to the Basquin law of fatigue for solids. These results are in excellent agreement with recent fiber-bundle models that include damage accumulation on elastic fibers and exemplify protein gels as model, brittlelike soft solids.
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