Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
810757 Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The fracture and time-dependent properties of cornea are very important for the development of corneal scaffolds and prostheses. However, there has been no systematic study of cornea fracture; time-dependent behavior of cornea has never been investigated in a fracture context. In this work, fracture toughness of cornea was characterized by trouser tear tests, and time-dependent properties of cornea were examined by stress-relaxation and uniaxial tensile tests. Control experiments were performed on a photoelastic rubber sheet. Corneal fracture resistance was found to be strain-rate dependent, with values ranging from 3.39±0.57 to 5.40±0.48 kJ m−2 over strain rates from 3 to 300 mm min−1. Results from stress-relaxation tests confirmed that cornea is a nonlinear viscoelastic material. The cornea behaved closer to a viscous fluid at small strain but became relatively more elastic at larger strain. Although cornea properties are greatly dependent on time, the stress–strain responses of cornea were found to be insensitive to the strain rate when subjected to tensile loading.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Biomedical Engineering
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