Abstract

Human skin exhibits highly varying mechanical properties, thickness, hardness, and anisotropy by virtue of changing fiber distributions and orientations, across different body locations. To date, only a few studies have computationally simulated skin anisotropy and no experimental study on synthetic skin exists which can mimic the accurate biomechanical properties of the skin. In this work, unique anisotropic synthetic skin samples were created using an elastic composite-based structure. Both single and multi-layer synthetic skin were fabricated with consistent fiber density and fiber dimensions and varying fiber angles to generate over 100 compositions. The compositions implied stress versus stretch responses in mechanical biaxial testing were compared to those of the skin of a person. Hyperelastic constitutive models were used to characterize the non-uniform test results. The created anisotropic synthetic skin must be essential for reliable Biomechanical investigation of skin free from ethical concerns, undertaking medical training and researching skin pathophysiology and injuries.

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