PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2020

A new load-controlled testing method for viscoelastic characterisation through stress-rate measurements

Cacopardo L, Mattei G, et al.

Materialia

University of Pisa

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This paper introduces a new load-controlled viscoelastic characterization approach termed the sigma-dot method (σ̇M), based on unconfined compression tests performed at multiple constant stress-rates and global fitting of the resulting strain-time curves to a Generalised Voigt model. The method uses physically implementable ramp stress inputs (rather than idealized step inputs), and allows viscoelastic parameters (instantaneous modulus, equilibrium modulus, characteristic retardation time) to be derived without requiring a priori definition of the linear viscoelastic region. The σ̇M was demonstrated on PDMS elastomers (10:1 and 30:1 ratios) and hydroxyapatite/gelatin (HA/Gel) composite hydrogels using both a universal testing machine and the CellScale MechanoCulture TR (MCTR) bioreactor; derived parameters were not significantly different between devices, indicating instrument-independence. The authors also compared σ̇M against traditional creep testing performed on the MCTR and found broadly comparable elastic moduli but method-dependent retardation time estimates, highlighting practical differences between ramp- and step-based approaches for time-dependent materials.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture TR

A CellScale MechanoCulture TR (MCTR) was used as a load-controlled compression and displacement-measurement platform to implement the sigma-dot (σ̇M) viscoelastic testing method on PDMS and HA/Gel hydrogel samples. Using the MCTR’s pressure-regulated actuation and Hall-effect displacement sensing, unconfined compression tests were run at multiple constant loading rates (0.02–4 N/s) to a terminal load of 20 N, generating strain-time responses used for global model fitting to extract instantaneous modulus, equilibrium modulus, and retardation time. The same MCTR system was also used to perform standard creep tests at 20 N (applied at 4 N/s) with 15 min acquisition, enabling direct comparison between σ̇M-derived and creep-derived viscoelastic parameters using the same device.
AUTHORS

Ludovica Cacopardo, Giorgio Mattei, Arti Ahluwalia.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Materialia

YEAR

2020

INSTITUTIONS

University of Pisa

COUNTRIES

Italy

INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture TR

TESTING METHODS

Compression TestingCreep TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Hydrogel Mechanical TestingMaterial Fatigue and DurabilityPolymers and Elastomers Testing

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