Simulating Irregular Symmetry Breaking in Gut Cross Sections Using a Novel Energy-Optimization Approach in Growth-Elasticity (2402.10923v2)
Abstract: Growth-elasticity is a powerful model framework for understanding complex shape development in soft biological tissues. At each instant, by mapping how continuum building blocks have grown geometrically and how they respond elastically to the push-and-pull from their neighbors, the shape of the growing structure is determined from a state of mechanical equilibrium. As mechanical loads continue to be added to the system through growth, many interesting shapes, such as smooth wavy wrinkles, sharp creases, and deep folds, can form on the tissue surface from a relatively flatter geometry. Previous numerical simulations of growth-elasticity have reproduced many interesting shapes resembling those observed in reality, such as the foldings on mammalian brains and guts. In the case of mammalian guts, it has been shown that wavy wrinkles, deep folds, and sharp creases on the interior organ surface can be simulated even under a simple assumption of isotropic uniform growth in the interior layer of the organ. Interestingly, the simulated patterns are all regular along the tube's circumference, whereas some undulation patterns in reality exhibit irregular patterns and a mixture of sharp creases and smooth indentations. In this paper, we have discovered abundant shape solutions with irregular indentation patterns by developing a Rayleigh-Ritz finite-element method. This approach enables the capture of more solutions that cannot be easily reached by previous methods. In addition to the previously found regular smooth and non-smooth configurations, we have identified a new transitional irregular smooth shape, new shapes with a mixture of smooth and non-smooth surface indentations, and a variety of irregular patterns with different numbers of creases. Our numerical results demonstrate that growth-elasticity modeling can match more shape patterns observed in reality than previously thought.
- Growth and remodelling of living tissues: Perspectives, challenges and opportunities. Journal of the Royal Society Interface 16. doi:10.1098/rsif.2019.0233.
- Elasticity and geometry, in: Peyresq Lectures on Nonlinear Phenomena. World Scientific, pp. 1–35.
- Morphoelastic control of gastro-intestinal organogenesis: Theoretical predictions and numerical insights. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 78, 493–510.
- Creases and cusps in growing soft matter. arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.11412 .
- Growth and instability in elastic tissues. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 53, 2284–2319.
- Size and curvature regulate pattern selection in the mammalian brain. Extreme Mechanics Letters 4, 193–198.
- Growth instabilities and folding in tubular organs: a variational method in non-linear elasticity. International Journal of Non-Linear Mechanics 47, 248–257.
- The mathematics and mechanics of biological growth. Springer.
- Differential growth and instability in elastic shells. Physical review letters 94, 198103.
- Nonlinear solid mechanics: a continuum approach for engineering science.
- Computational aspects of growth-induced instabilities through eigenvalue analysis. Computational Mechanics 56, 405–420.
- Creases in soft tissues generated by growth. Europhysics Letters 95, 64002.
- Allgemeine kontinuumstheorie der versetzungen und eigenspannungen. Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis 4, 273–334.
- Elastic-plastic deformation at finite strains. Trans.ASMEJ.Appl.Mech. 54, 1–6.
- Surface wrinkling of mucosa induced by volumetric growth: theory, simulation and experiment. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 59, 758–774.
- Surface wrinkling patterns on a core-shell soft sphere. Physical review letters 106, 234301.
- Circumferential buckling instability of a growing cylindrical tube. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 59, 525–537.
- On the mechanics of continua with boundary energies and growing surfaces. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 61, 1446–1463.
- Stress-dependent finite growth in soft elastic tissues. Journal of Biomechanics 27, 455–467. doi:10.1016/0021-9290(94)90021-3.
- Surface sulci in squeezed soft solids. Physical review letters 110, 024302.
- On the growth and form of cortical convolutions. Nature Physics 12, 588–593.
- Modelling fibers in growing disks of soft tissues. Mathematics and Mechanics of Solids 20, 663–679.