Hydrogel biomaterials are a popular candidate for engineering constructs that can mimic the properties of native tissue for disease modeling and tissue-engineering applications. Studies have shown that poly(ethylene) glycol diacrylate (PEGDA) hydrogels can be fabricated to display many biological aspects of native tissue. However, they are unable to recapitulate fundamental mechanical properties of such tissue, such as anisotropy and nonlinearity. Photolithographic techniques have been employed to generate anisotropic linear PEGDA hydrogels via patterned reinforcement. The present study indicates that such techniques can be modified to generate PEGDA constructs with a sinusoidal reinforcement that display a strongly nonlinear response to tensile loading. This work sets the stage for more intricate patterning for providing increased control over hydrogel mechanical response.
Fluid‐driven fracture propagation is widely observed in various geological processes and crucial to many applications of geological engineering. Developing robust and accurate numerical strategies has significance in advancing the scientific understanding and engineering applications related with fluid‐driven fracture propagation. We present a finite element‐finite volume strategy using asymptotic fracture tip enrichment to model the fluid‐driven fracture propagation in three‐dimensional Cartesian meshes under the viscosity‐dominated regime, in which the fluid viscosity‐related process is the dominant energy dissipation mechanism. We use the finite element method to discretize the balance of linear momentum equation for the deformed solid and the finite volume method to discretize the Reynolds equation that governs the fluid flow. In order to track the evolving fracture front in heterogeneous media, we extend the implicit level set approach originally proposed for the displacement discontinuity method. Through this process, a signed distance‐based fracture propagation criterion naturally emerges and is suitable for the viscosity‐dominated regime when solid toughness becomes irrelevant. Critically, we enrich the fluid volume treatment near the fracture front using the tip asymptotic solution. This enrichment strategy is crucial to overcome the mesh nonconformity caused by the arbitrary intersections between propagating fracture front and underlying Cartesian meshes. We compare the numerical results with analytical solutions of the KGD problem and the penny‐shape problem, and illustrate the mesh size and time step‐insensitivity of the numerical results due to the tip enrichment technique. Also, we demonstrate the capabilities of the proposed method to model fluid‐driven fracture propagation in various heterogeneous media.
Layered constructs from poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels and chicken eggshell membranes (ESMs) are fabricated, which can be further cross-linked by glutaraldehyde (GA) to form GA-PEG-ESM composites. Our results indicate that ESMs composed of protein fibrous networks show elastic moduli ∼3.3-5.0 MPa and elongation percentages ∼47-56%, close to human heart valve leaflets. Finite element simulations reveal obvious stress concentration on a partial number of fibers in the GA-cross-linked ESM (GA-ESM) samples, which can be alleviated by efficient stress distribution among multiple layers of ESMs embedded in PEG hydrogels. Moreover, the polymeric networks of PEG hydrogels can prevent mineral deposition and enzyme degradation of protein fibers from incorporated ESMs. The fibrous structures of ESMs retain in the GA-PEG-ESM samples after subcutaneous implantation for 4 weeks, while those from ESM and GA-ESM samples show early degradation to certain extent, suggesting the prevention of enzymatic degradation of protein fibers by the polymeric network of PEG hydrogels in vivo. Thus, these GA-PEG-ESM layered constructs show heterogenic structures and mechanical properties comparable to heart valve leaflets, as well as improved functions to prevent progressive calcification and enzymatic degeneration, which are likely used for artificial heart valves.
Poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA) hydrogels can be used as scaffold material for tissue engineered heart values (TEHVs) providing a promising alternative to generate suitable heart valve replacement method. The patterning of PEGDA hydrogels using photolithographic techniques creates materials that mimic the mechanical behavior of native heart valve tissues. However, targeted material properties are obtained via a trial-and-error process. Depending on experiments alone to explore the influence of pattern topology is expensive and time-consuming. We combine a newly proposed computational framework with published experimental data to numerically investigate the influence of pattern geometry on the mechanical behavior of patterned PEGDA hydrogels. The numerical strategy and simulation results presented here can provide guidance to optimize the design of PEGDA hydrogels with targeted material properties, therefore advance the development of TEHVs.
A time-domain method for the analysis of arch dam-foundation rock dynamic interaction during earthquake was proposed, and the dynamic relaxation technique was adopted to obtain the initial static response for dynamic analysis by [Du et al. (2005). The paper has been contributed to Bulletin of earthquake engineering]. In this paper, a nonlinear explicit method in time domain considering the opening and closing effect of contact joints on arch dam during earthquake is further proposed by introducing the dynamic contact force model into the method. The simulation accuracy of dynamic contact force model is verified by comparing its calculation result and test result of scale model on shaking table. Finally, the influence of joints on the seismic response of Xiaowan arch dam is studied by the proposed method and some conclusions are given.
We present a multi-resolution approach for constructing model-based simulations of hydraulic fracturing, wherein flow through porous media is coupled with fluid-driven fracture. The approach consists of a hybrid scheme that couples a discrete crack representation in a global domain to a phase-field representation in a local subdomain near the crack tip. The multi-resolution approach addresses issues such as the computational expense of accurate hydraulic fracture simulations and the difficulties associated with reconstructing crack apertures from diffuse fracture representations. In the global domain, a coupled system of equations for displacements and pressures is considered. The crack geometry is assumed to be fixed and the displacement field is enriched with discontinuous functions. Around the crack tips in the local subdomains, phase-field sub-problems are instantiated on the fly to propagate fractures in arbitrary, mesh independent directions. The governing equations and fields in the global and local domains are approximated using a combination of finite-volume and finite element discretizations. The efficacy of the method is illustrated through various benchmark problems in hydraulic fracturing, as well as a new study of fluid-driven crack growth around a stiff inclusion.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.