Alginate-based hydrogels show the same complex mechanical behavior as brain tissue

Distler T, Schaller E, Steinmann P, Boccaccini AR, Budday S (2020)


Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2020

Journal

Book Volume: 111

Article Number: 103979

URI: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1751616120305312

DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.103979

Abstract

Mimicking the mechanical properties of native human tissues is one key route in tissue engineering. However, the successful cre- ation of functional tissue equivalents requires the comprehensive understanding of the complex and nonlinear mechanical properties of both native tissues and biomaterials. Here, we demonstrate that it is possible to replicate the complex mechanical behavior of soft tissues, exemplary shown for porcine brain tissue, under multiple loading conditions, compression, tension, and torsional shear, through simple blends of alginate and gelatin hydrogels. Alginate exhibits a pronounced compression-tension asymmetry and a nonlinear behavior, while gelatin shows an almost linear response. Blended together, alginate-gelatin (ALG-GEL) hydrogels can resemble the characteristic nonlinear, conditioning, and compression-tension-asymmetric behavior of brain tissue. We demonstrate that hydrogel concentration and incubation effectively tune the stiffness and loading-mode-specific stress relaxation behavior. The stiffness increases with increasing hydrogel concentration and decreases with increasing incubation time. In addition, we observe slower stress relaxation after long incubation times. Our systematic approach highlights the importance of single component, multi-modal mechanical analysis of hydrogels to understand the distinct structure-mechanics relation of each hydrogel component to eventually mimic the response of native tissues. The presented dataset will allow for the structurally derived compositional design of hydrogels for a broad variety of tissue engineering applications.

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How to cite

APA:

Distler, T., Schaller, E., Steinmann, P., Boccaccini, A.R., & Budday, S. (2020). Alginate-based hydrogels show the same complex mechanical behavior as brain tissue. Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, 111. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2020.103979

MLA:

Distler, Thomas, et al. "Alginate-based hydrogels show the same complex mechanical behavior as brain tissue." Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials 111 (2020).

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