Stress-Softening and Residual Strain Effects in Suture Materials
Author(s) -
Alex Elı́as-Zúñiga,
Beatriz Montoya,
Wendy Ortega-Lara,
Eduardo FloresVillalba,
Ciro A. Rodrı́guez,
Héctor R. Siller,
José Antonio Díaz Elizondo,
Óscar Martínez-Romero
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
advances in materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.356
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 1687-8442
pISSN - 1687-8434
DOI - 10.1155/2013/249512
Subject(s) - materials science , polydioxanone , softening , composite material , residual stress , pseudoelasticity , microstructure , martensite
This work focuses on the experimental characterization of suture material samples of MonoPlus, Monosyn, polyglycolic acid, polydioxanone 2–0, polydioxanone 4–0, poly(glycolide-co-epsilon-caprolactone), nylon, and polypropylene when subjected to cyclic loading and unloading conditions. It is found that all tested suture materials exhibit stress-softening and residual strain effects related to the microstructural material damage upon deformation from the natural, undistorted state of the virgin suture material. To predict experimental observations, a new constitutive material model that takes into account stress-softening and residual strain effects is developed. The basis of this model is the inclusion of a phenomenological nonmonotonous softening function that depends on the strain intensity between loading and unloading cycles. The theory is illustrated by modifying the non-Gaussian average-stretch, full-network model to capture stress-softening and residual strains by using pseudoelasticity concepts. It is shown that results obtained from theoretical simulations compare well with suture material experimental data
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