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Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue

There has always been a need to understand the mechanical properties of biological membrane tissues in the fields of medicine, biomechanical engineering, and cosmetology. These tissues are known to display complex anisotropic, hyperelastic, and non-linear stress-strain properties, while also being s...

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Main Author: Siddiqui, Aashir
Other Authors: Govender, Reuben
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Mechanical Engineering 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Siddiqui, Aashir
author2 Govender, Reuben
author_browse Govender, Reuben
Siddiqui, Aashir
author_facet Govender, Reuben
Siddiqui, Aashir
author_sort Siddiqui, Aashir
collection Thesis
description There has always been a need to understand the mechanical properties of biological membrane tissues in the fields of medicine, biomechanical engineering, and cosmetology. These tissues are known to display complex anisotropic, hyperelastic, and non-linear stress-strain properties, while also being sensitive to environmental conditions. Given these complexities, ongoing efforts are being made to develop a suitable testing methodology. At the University of Cape Town, the Blast Impact and Survivability Research Unit is building a testing methodology (using their in-house planar biaxial tensile testing and bulge inflation devices) that has thus far been used to test small intestine submucosa tissue. As part of this ongoing effort, this research aimed to build a tissue-gripping system that can be used to attach a specimen to the planar biaxial tensile testing machine since the previous clamping method was not suitable. A rake clamping system that allowed contra-lateral motion was built, along with the necessary tooling to attach the rakes and excise a square-shaped specimen. Planar biaxial tensile tests were then conducted on small intestine submucosa tissue to assess the performance of these rakes. The rakes were found to be effective at allowing the tissue to expand and contract contra-laterally while also being structurally sound enough to withstand the loads applied during testing. In the progression of this research, improvements were also made to the optical deformation measurements and sample thickness measurements. Regarding the optical deformation measurements, it was found that speckling the sample with multi-coloured paints improved correlation, and the addition of Cross Polarising Line filters removed harsh reflections that would stop the Digital Image Correlation software from evaluating facet displacement. Looking at the thickness measurements, a migration was made from wax histology to cryo-histology for preparing sections to measure the samples' thickness. Images taken showed that the cryo-sectioned tissue had undergone less dilation and fibre fraying than the wax histology used by prior students, offering more realistic and accurate thickness measurements. The successes found with the designed rakes and the improvements made to the testing methodology have laid the groundwork for other biological tissues to be tested.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:43:40.758Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Mechanical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Mechanical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41551 Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue Siddiqui, Aashir Govender, Reuben Engineering There has always been a need to understand the mechanical properties of biological membrane tissues in the fields of medicine, biomechanical engineering, and cosmetology. These tissues are known to display complex anisotropic, hyperelastic, and non-linear stress-strain properties, while also being sensitive to environmental conditions. Given these complexities, ongoing efforts are being made to develop a suitable testing methodology. At the University of Cape Town, the Blast Impact and Survivability Research Unit is building a testing methodology (using their in-house planar biaxial tensile testing and bulge inflation devices) that has thus far been used to test small intestine submucosa tissue. As part of this ongoing effort, this research aimed to build a tissue-gripping system that can be used to attach a specimen to the planar biaxial tensile testing machine since the previous clamping method was not suitable. A rake clamping system that allowed contra-lateral motion was built, along with the necessary tooling to attach the rakes and excise a square-shaped specimen. Planar biaxial tensile tests were then conducted on small intestine submucosa tissue to assess the performance of these rakes. The rakes were found to be effective at allowing the tissue to expand and contract contra-laterally while also being structurally sound enough to withstand the loads applied during testing. In the progression of this research, improvements were also made to the optical deformation measurements and sample thickness measurements. Regarding the optical deformation measurements, it was found that speckling the sample with multi-coloured paints improved correlation, and the addition of Cross Polarising Line filters removed harsh reflections that would stop the Digital Image Correlation software from evaluating facet displacement. Looking at the thickness measurements, a migration was made from wax histology to cryo-histology for preparing sections to measure the samples' thickness. Images taken showed that the cryo-sectioned tissue had undergone less dilation and fibre fraying than the wax histology used by prior students, offering more realistic and accurate thickness measurements. The successes found with the designed rakes and the improvements made to the testing methodology have laid the groundwork for other biological tissues to be tested. 2025-08-04T09:47:35Z 2025-08-04T09:47:35Z 2023 2025-08-04T09:31:23Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41551 en eng application/pdf Department of Mechanical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Universiy of Cape Town
spellingShingle Engineering
Siddiqui, Aashir
Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
title_full Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
title_fullStr Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
title_full_unstemmed Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
title_short Development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
title_sort development of specimen mounting and gripping system for planar biaxial tensile testing of biological membrane tissue
topic Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41551
work_keys_str_mv AT siddiquiaashir developmentofspecimenmountingandgrippingsystemforplanarbiaxialtensiletestingofbiologicalmembranetissue