We present a fiber-distributed model of the reinforcing collagen of the human
cornea. The model describes the basic connections between the components of the
tissue by defining an elementary block (cell) and upscaling it to the physical
size of the cornea. The cell is defined by two sets of collagen fibrils running
in sub-orthogonal directions, characterized by a random distribution of the
spatial orientation and connected by chemical bonds of two kinds. The bonds of
the first kind describe the lamellar crosslinks, forming the ribbon-like
lamellae; while the bonds of the second kind describe the stacking crosslinks,
piling up the lamellae to form the structure of the stroma. The spatial
replication of the cell produces a truss structure with a considerable number
of degrees of freedom. The statistical characterization of the collagen fibrils
leads to a mechanical model that reacts to the action of the deterministic
intraocular pressure with a stochastic distribution of the displacements, here
characterized by their mean value and variance. The strategy to address the
solution of the heavy resulting numerical problem is to use the so-called
stochastic finite element improved perturbation method combined with a fully
explicit solver. Results demonstrate that the variability of the mechanical
properties affects in a non-negligible manner the expected response of the
structure to the physiological action.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure