BME Seminar - Wed., Sept. 17
Event Date: | September 17, 2014 |
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Hosted By: | Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering |
Time: | 9:30 a.m. |
Location: | MJIS 1001, WL campus |
Fibers, especially collagen fibers, form the primary mechanical component of many load-bearing tissues, including tendons, ligaments, blood vessels, and skin. In our attempts to understand the function and dysfunction of such tissues, we are often informed by information on the very small scale - network architecture from SEM or confocal microscopy, fiber orientation from polarized light, and fiber stress-strain or degradation data from microscopic experiments. Using that information to construct a meaningful model of the tissue as a whole, however, remains an important and difficult challenge. Our group uses a two-scale approach in which the tissue scale is represented by a continuous finite-element mesh, but the constitutive equation is replaced with a microscopic-scale network problem at each integration point. This approach allows coupling between the fiber and the tissue scale, which can then be used to interrogate individual fibers (e.g., to select some for degradation or failure) or to introduce a more complex fiber architecture, perhaps with interacting components. Specific applications of our approach include the facet capsular ligament in the spine and the mechanical behavior of a blood vessel, as well as collagen gels, which serve as an excellent well-controlled tissue analog. The seminar will focus on comparison between the model and experiments on tissues and tissue analogs, including calculations of fiber reorientation under load and tissue failure.
~BME Faculty Host: Taeyoon Kim~
***Coffee and juice will be provided at West Lafayette***
2014-09-17 09:30:00 2014-09-17 10:30:00 America/Indiana/Indianapolis BME Seminar - Wed., Sept. 17 Victor Barocas, Ph.D., Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Director of Graduate Studies for Biomedical Engineering at the University of Minnesota will present the seminar "Multiscale Mechanical Modeling of Fibrous Tissues" this Wednesday, Sept. 17th, at 9:30 a.m. in MJIS 1001. MJIS 1001, WL campus