A four-component mixture theory applied to cartilaginous tissues. Numerical modelling and experiments (Q2711187)

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A four-component mixture theory applied to cartilaginous tissues. Numerical modelling and experiments
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    3 May 2001
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    biomechanical flows
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    cartilage
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    A four-component mixture theory applied to cartilaginous tissues. Numerical modelling and experiments (English)
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    Mixture theory is applied to the numerical modeling of the cartilaginous discs which separate spinal vertebrae and to artificial hydrogels. Both exhibit swelling and shrinking. This behavior is caused by water bound to the charged solid skeleton of the tissue through an interplay of mechanical, electrical, and chemical mechanisms. The tissue is represented by a porous deformable medium saturated with a fluid in which positive and negative ions are dissolved. Hence the four components. A two-component theory involving only a solid and a fluid is also examined.NEWLINENEWLINENEWLINETissue deformations, fluid and ion flows, fluid pressure, ionic concentrations, and electrical potentials are computed with the use of the four-component theory. The theory is derived from the balance equations and constitutive equations for a linear elastic solid medium described by Hooke's law and from extended forms of Darcy's law and Fick's law for the fluid and ion fluxes, respectively. The results of the calculations are confirmed experimentally by measurements of deformations and electrical potentials of intervertebal discs and hydrogels as functions of time.
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