Although there are many successful descriptions of the mechanical response of dermis at different levels of complexity and incorporating varying degrees of the physical phenomena involved in deformation, observations indicate… Click to show full abstract
Although there are many successful descriptions of the mechanical response of dermis at different levels of complexity and incorporating varying degrees of the physical phenomena involved in deformation, observations indicate that the unraveling of fibers involves a complex three-dimensional process in which they interact in ways that resemble a braided pattern. Here we develop two complementary treatments to gain a better understanding of the mechanical response of dermis: a) an analytical treatment incorporating fibril stiffness, interfibrillar frictional sliding, and the effect of lateral fibers on the extension of a primary fiber; b) a coarse-grained molecular dynamics model comprised of an array of parallel curved fibrils simulating a fiber. Interfibrillar frictional sliding and stiffness are also captured. Both analytical and molecular dynamics models operate at a scale compatible with the wavelength of collagen fibers (∼10 µm). The constitutive description presented here incorporates important physical processes taking place during deformation of dermis and thus represents an advance in our understanding of these phenomena.
               
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