Swelling instability of surface-attached gels as a model of soft tissue growth under geometric constraints |
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Authors: | Martine Ben Amar Pasquale Ciarletta |
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Affiliation: | Laboratoire de Physique Statistique de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure, UPMC Univ Paris 06, CNRS, 24 rue Lhomond, 75005 Paris, France |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this work is to provide a theoretical analysis of the mechanical behavior of the growth of soft materials under geometrical constraints. In particular, we focus on the swelling of a gel layer clamped to a substrate, which is still the subject of many experimental tests. Because the constrained swelling process induces compressive stresses, all these experiments exhibit surface instabilities, which ultimately lead to cusp formation. Our model is based on fixing a neo-Hookean constitutive energy together with the incompressibility requirement for a volumetric, homogeneous mass addition. Our approach is developed mostly, but not uniquely, in the plane strain configuration. We show how the standard equilibrium equations from continuum mechanics have a similarity with the two-dimensional Stokes flows, and we use a nonlinear stream function for the exact treatment of the incompressibility constraint. A free energy approach allows the extension both to arbitrary hyperelastic strain energies and to additional interactions, such as surface energies. We find that, at constant volumetric growth, the threshold for a wavy instability is completely governed by the amount of growth. Nevertheless, the determination of the wavelength at threshold, which scales with the initial thickness of the gel layer, requires the coupling with a surface effect. Our findings, which are valid in proximity of the threshold, are compared to experimental results. The proposed treatment can be extended to weakly nonlinearities within the aim of the theory of bifurcations. |
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Keywords: | Swelling Growth Instability Soft tissues Exact elasticity |
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