PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2018

Combined Use of Parallel-Plate Compression and Finite Element Modeling to Analyze the Mechanical Properties of Intact Porcine Lens

Wang K, Venetsanos DT, et al.

Journal of Mechanics in Medicine and Biology

Nottingham Trent University, Coventry University, Kingston University

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study evaluated the feasibility and analytical accuracy of using parallel-plate compression to measure the overall (intact) mechanical properties of porcine crystalline lenses. Intact lenses (capsule preserved) were compressed in a buffered fluid bath using a MicroSquisher setup, and the resulting force–displacement response was analyzed using both the classical Hertz contact model and a large-deformation–adjusted Hertz model. Finite element simulations showed the classical Hertz model systematically overestimates Young’s modulus (errors >10%), while the adjusted model produced values much closer to the known inputs (errors <~1.3%). Experimental lens testing yielded equivalent Young’s moduli in the ~3.2–4.3 kPa range using the adjusted model, and the lenses exhibited hysteresis and low-frequency viscoelastic damping under sinusoidal loading.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MicroSquisher

A CellScale MicroSquisher was used in a parallel-plate compression configuration (shown schematically and with example lens images during contact and compression in Fig. 1 on page 3) to compress intact porcine lenses in a physiologically balanced buffer bath. The MicroSquisher’s microbeam deflection (measured and processed in SquisherJoy) provided compressive force, while the integrated imaging system quantified lens deformation during loading. The CellScale-generated force–displacement data were the core experimental input for validating lens modulus extraction methods: the authors used these measurements to demonstrate that an adjusted Hertzian contact model, supported by FE modeling, provides substantially more accurate modulus estimates for large-deformation compression of intact lenses than the classical Hertz approach.
AUTHORS

Kehao Wang; Demetrios T. Venetsanos; Jian Wang; Barbara K. Pierscionek.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Journal of Mechanics in Medicine and Biology

YEAR

2018

INSTITUTIONS

Nottingham Trent University, Coventry University, Kingston University

COUNTRIES

United Kingdom

INSTRUMENT USED

MicroSquisher

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingMicro-Mechanical TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Ophthalmic Biomechanics & Corneal Tissue Engineering

Related Publications:

Instrument Used:
Year:
Testing Method:
Research Application:
Country:

Biomechanical properties of the capsule and extracellular matrix play a major role during the Wolffian/epididymal duct development

Oliveira ECS, Hu P, et al.

Andrology

MicroSquisher

Compression TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingMicro-Mechanical Testing

ECM & Decellularized Matrix MechanicsReproductive and Fetal Membrane Mechanics

2025

Splitting the Difference: Genetically-Tunable Mycelial Films Using Natural Genetic Variations in Schizophyllum commune

Whabi V, Xu J

Journal of Bioresources and Bioproducts

MicroSquisher

Micro-Mechanical TestingTensile Testing

Material Fatigue and DurabilityMembranes and Thin Films MechanicsPolymers and Elastomers Testing

2025

Sequential Angiogenic–Osteogenic Coupling via a Spatiotemporally Graded Hydrogel Enables Vascularized Bone Organoids for Critical-Sized Calvarial Defect Reconstruction

Lu X, Wang F, et al.

Composites Part B: Engineering

MicroSquisher

Compression TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingMicro-Mechanical Testing

Bone Tissue Engineering & MechanicsCell Laden HydrogelsHydrogel Mechanical TestingInjectable & Regenerative BiomaterialsOrganoid and Tissue Mimetic SystemsVascular Tissue Engineering & Mechanics

2025

Contact Sales

Product of Interest: