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Issue title: 3rd International Symposium on Mechanobiology of Cartilage and Chondrocyte. Brussels, May 16–17, 2003
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Li, L.P. | Herzog, W.
Affiliations: Human Performance Lab, Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Note: [] Address for correspondence: LePing Li, Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive, N.W., Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4. Tel.: +1 403 220 3449; Fax: +1 403 284 3553; E‐mail: leping@kin.ucalgary.ca.
Abstract: The relative importance of fluid‐dependent and fluid‐independent transient mechanical behavior in articular cartilage was examined for tensile and unconfined compression testing using a fibril reinforced model. The collagen matrix of articular cartilage was modeled as viscoelastic using a quasi‐linear viscoelastic formulation with strain‐dependent elastic modulus, while the proteoglycan matrix was considered as linearly elastic. The collagen viscoelastic properties were obtained by fitting experimental data from a tensile test. These properties were used to investigate unconfined compression testing, and the sensitivity of the properties was also explored. It was predicted that the stress relaxation observed in tensile tests was not caused by fluid pressurization at the macroscopic level. A multi‐step tensile stress relaxation test could be approximated using a hereditary integral in which the elastic fibrillar modulus was taken to be a linear function of the fibrillar strain. Applying the same formulation to the radial fibers in unconfined compression, stress relaxation could not be simulated if fluid pressurization were absent. Collagen viscoelasticity was found to slightly weaken fluid pressurization in unconfined compression, and this effect was relatively more significant at moderate strain rates. Therefore, collagen viscoelasticity appears to play an import role in articular cartilage in tensile testing, while fluid pressurization dominates the transient mechanical behavior in compression. Collagen viscoelasticity plays a minor role in the mechanical response of cartilage in unconfined compression if significant fluid flow is present.
Keywords: Cartilage mechanics, cartilage tensile properties, collagen fibril reinforcement, nonlinear biomechanics, strain rates, unconfined compression
Journal: Biorheology, vol. 41, no. 3-4, pp. 181-194, 2004
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