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We study the drying of stratum corneum, the skin's outermost layer and an essential barrier to mechanical and chemical stresses from the environment. Even though stratum corneum exhibits structural features across multiple length-scales, contemporary understanding of the mechanical properties of stratum corneum is based on the assumption that its thickness and composition are homogeneous. We quantify spatially resolved in-plane traction stress and deformation at the interface between a macroscopic sample of porcine stratum corneum and an adherent deformable elastomer substrate. At length-scales greater than a millimeter, the skin behaves as a homogeneous elastic material. At this scale, a linear elastic model captures the spatial distribution of traction stresses and the dependence of drying behavior on the elastic modulus of the substrate. At smaller scales, the traction stresses are strikingly heterogeneous and dominated by the heterogeneous structure of the stratum corneum.
Assuntos
Dessecação , Fenômenos Fisiológicos da Pele , Estresse Fisiológico , Animais , Módulo de Elasticidade/fisiologia , Corantes Fluorescentes/metabolismo , Sus scrofaRESUMO
We have investigated wavelength-dependent light scattering in biomimetic structures with short-range order. Coherent backscattering experiments are performed to measure the transport mean free path over a wide wavelength range. Overall scattering strength is reduced significantly due to short-range order and near-field effects. Our analysis explains why single scattering of light is dominant over multiple scattering in similar biological structures and is responsible for color generation.
Assuntos
Materiais Biomiméticos/química , Cor , Modelos Biológicos , Refratometria/métodos , Simulação por Computador , Luz , Espalhamento de RadiaçãoRESUMO
Human skin is a composite tissue that exhibits anisotropic mechanical properties. This anisotropy arises primarily from the alignment of collagen and elastin fibers in the dermis, which causes the skin to exhibit greater tension in one direction, making it appear stiffer. A diverse number of skin tension guidelines have been developed to assist surgeons in making incisions that produce the least conspicuous scars. However, skin anisotropy is believed to vary from subject to subject, and no single guideline is universally recognized as the best to implement for surgical applications. To date, no system exists that can rapidly and non-invasively measure lines of skin tension in vivo. In this article, we evaluate the ability of a new aspiration system to measure the anisotropy of human skin. The device painlessly applies a radial stress of 17â¯kPa to a region of skin, and captures radially asymmetric skin deformations via a dermal camera. These deformations are used to quantify orientations of strain extrema and the direction of greatest skin stiffness. The ratio of these asymmetric strains varies between 1 and -0.75. A simple 2D transverse isotropic model captures this behavior for multiple anatomical sites. Clinical trials reveal that skin tension line orientations are comparable with existing skin tension maps and generally agree across subjects, however orientations statistically differ between individuals. As such, existing guidelines appear to provide only approximate estimates of skin tension orientation. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Skin tension lines (STL) in human skin arise primarily from collagen fiber alignment in the dermis. These lines are used by surgeons to guide incisions that produce the least conspicuous scars. While numerous anatomical STL maps exist, no single guideline is universally recognized as the most reliable. Moreover, manual methods of quantifying STL are imprecise. For the first time, we have developed a device capable of rapidly and non-invasively measuring STL orientations in vivo, using a single test. Our results are used to establish a simple constitutive model of mechanical skin anisotropy. Clinical trials further reveal STL orientations are comparable with existing maps, but statistically differ between individuals. Existing guidelines therefore appear to provide only approximate estimates of STL orientation.
Assuntos
Colágeno/metabolismo , Derme , Tecido Elástico , Matriz Extracelular/metabolismo , Estresse Mecânico , Adulto , Anisotropia , Derme/metabolismo , Derme/fisiopatologia , Tecido Elástico/metabolismo , Tecido Elástico/fisiopatologia , Humanos , MasculinoRESUMO
To elucidate slow dynamics in glassy materials, we introduce the figure-8 model in which N hard blocks undergo Brownian motion around a circuit in the shape of a figure 8. This system undergoes kinetic arrest at a critical packing fraction phi=phi g<1 , and for phi approximately phi g long-time diffusion is controlled by rare, cooperative, "junction-crossing" particle rearrangements. We find that the average time between junction crossings tau JC, and hence the structural relaxation time, does not simply scale with the configurational volume Omega c of transition states, because tau JC also depends on the time to complete a junction crossing. The importance of these results in understanding cage-breaking dynamics in glassy systems is discussed.
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We describe a high-throughput method capable of quantifying the elastic modulus and drying stress of ex vivo samples of human stratum corneum. Spatially resolved drying deformations in circular tissue samples are measured, azimuthally averaged and fitted with a profile based on a linear elastic model. Our approach enables the comparison of the physical effects of different cleansers. We find that cleansing can cause dramatic changes to the mechanical properties of stratum corneum. In some cases, cleansing can lead to an order of magnitude increase in elastic modulus and drying stress. We expect that these mechanical properties have a direct impact on cracking and chapping skin as well as the milder sensation of perceived tightness often experienced after washing. Mechanical drying studies are also combined with drop wetting studies and pyranine staining experiments. This combination of techniques allows one to establish a multidimensional profile of stratum corneum including stiffness, susceptibility to drying, hydrophilicity and barrier functionality.
Assuntos
Dessecação , Epiderme/efeitos dos fármacos , Higiene da Pele/métodos , Tensoativos/farmacologia , Adulto , Módulo de Elasticidade , Epiderme/fisiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Técnicas In Vitro , Modelos Biológicos , Fenômenos Fisiológicos da PeleRESUMO
We investigate the dynamics of fracture in drying films of colloidal silica. Water loss quenches the nanoparticle dispersions to form a liquid-saturated elastic network of particles that relieves drying-induced strain by cracking. These cracks display intriguing intermittent motion originating from the deformation of arrested crack tips and aging of the elastic network. The dynamics of a single crack exhibits a universal evolution, described by a balance of the driving elastic power with the sum of interfacial power and the viscous dissipation rate of flowing interstitial fluid.
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While the important role of electrostatic interactions in aqueous colloidal suspensions is widely known and reasonably well-understood, their relevance to nonpolar suspensions remains mysterious. We measure the interaction potentials of colloidal particles in a nonpolar solvent with reverse micelles. We find surprisingly strong electrostatic interactions characterized by surface potentials, |ezeta|, from 2.0 to 4.4 k(B)T and screening lengths, kappa(-1), from 0.2 to 1.4 microm. Interactions depend on the concentration of reverse micelles and the degree of confinement. Furthermore, when the particles are weakly confined, the values of |ezeta| and kappa extracted from interaction measurements are consistent with bulk measurements of conductivity and electrophoretic mobility. A simple thermodynamic model, relating the structure of the micelles to the equilibrium ionic strength, is in good agreement with both conductivity and interaction measurements. Since dissociated ions are solubilized by reverse micelles, the entropic incentive to charge a particle surface is qualitatively changed from aqueous systems, and surface entropy plays an important role.
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Minute concentrations of suspended particles can dramatically alter the behavior of a drying droplet. After a period of isotropic shrinkage, similar to droplets of a pure liquid, these droplets suddenly buckle like an elastic shell. While linear elasticity is able to describe the morphology of the buckled droplets, it fails to predict the onset of buckling. Instead, we find that buckling is coincident with a stress-induced fluid to solid transition in a shell of particles at a droplet's surface, occurring when attractive capillary forces overcome stabilizing electrostatic forces between particles.
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We describe direct imaging measurements of the collective and relative diffusion of two colloidal spheres near a flat plate. The bounding surface modifies the spheres' dynamics, even at separations of tens of radii. This behavior is captured by a stokeslet analysis of fluid flow driven by the spheres' and wall's no-slip boundary conditions. In particular, this analysis reveals surprising asymmetry in the normal modes for pair diffusion near a flat surface.
Assuntos
Coloides/química , Difusão , Modelos Químicos , Dióxido de Silício/química , Propriedades de SuperfícieRESUMO
Drying aqueous suspensions of monodisperse silica nanoparticles can fracture in remarkable patterns. As the material solidifies, evenly spaced cracks invade from the drying surface, with individual cracks undergoing intermittent motion. We show that the growth of cracks is limited by the advancement of the compaction front, which is governed by a balance of evaporation and flow of fluid at the drying surface. Surprisingly, the macroscopic dynamics of drying show signatures of molecular-scale fluid effects.