PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2025

Molecular Creep Induced Fatigue Rupture of Fibrin Clots

Liu Z, Lu Y, et al.

Advanced Science

Beihang University, Peking University

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This work investigates the mechanisms governing fatigue rupture of fibrin clots under cyclic mechanical loading. Using uniaxial tension, pure shear, and fatigue crack growth experiments, the study quantifies how molecular creep within the fibrin network drives time-dependent failure. Results show that fibrin fibers undergo rate-dependent elongation and molecular unfolding preceding crack propagation, with a measurable fatigue threshold below which failure does not occur. Combining confocal microscopy, rheology, and fracture mechanics, the study links molecular slippage and protofibril unbinding to macroscopic fatigue behavior, providing insights into thrombus stability and embolism risk.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

Mechanical tests were performed using a CellScale UniVert mechanical testing system (Waterloo, ON, Canada) equipped with a 10 N load cell and water bath to maintain physiological conditions. Fibrin gels were subjected to uniaxial tensile loading, pure shear, and cyclic fatigue protocols to measure stress–strain response, fracture energy, and fatigue crack propagation. The UniVert enabled precise displacement control (0.5 mm min⁻¹) and cyclic load application over thousands of cycles, revealing time-dependent fibrin softening and rupture due to molecular creep and network fatigue.
AUTHORS

Zhen Liu, Yanhui Lu, Mingqiang Zhang, Hao Zhang, Zhiqiang Wei, Haibo Liu, Zhifeng Wang, Xuefeng Guo.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Advanced Science

YEAR

2025

INSTITUTIONS

Beihang University, Peking University

COUNTRIES

China

INSTRUMENT USED

UniVert

TESTING METHODS

Creep TestingFatigue TestingHydrated and Temperature Controlled TestingStress Relaxation TestingTensile TestingViscoelastic & Time-Dependent Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Cardiac Tissue Engineering & MechanicsECM & Decellularized Matrix MechanicsHydrogel Mechanical TestingMaterial Fatigue and DurabilityMechanotransductionVascular Tissue Engineering & Mechanics

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