Yuan-Cheng Fung

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox scientist

Yuan-Cheng "Bert" Fung (September 15, 1919 – December 15, 2019) was a Chinese-American bioengineer and writer. He is regarded as a founding figure of bioengineering, tissue engineering, and the "Founder of Modern Biomechanics".[1]

Biography

Template:Refimprove Fung was born in Jiangsu Province, China in 1919. He earned a bachelor's degree in 1941 and a master's degree in 1943 from the National Central University (later renamed Nanjing University in mainland China and reinstated in Taiwan), and earned a Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology in 1948. Fung was Professor Emeritus and Research Engineer at the University of California San Diego. He published prominent texts along with Pin Tong who was then at Hong Kong University of Science & Technology. Fung died at Jacobs Medical Center in San Diego, California, aged 100, on December 15, 2019.[2][3]

Fung was married to Luna Yu Hsien-Shih, a former mathematician and cofounder of the UC San Diego International Center, until her death in 2017. The couple raised two children.[4]

Research

He is the author of numerous books including Foundations of Solid Mechanics, Continuum Mechanics, and a series of books on Biomechanics. He is also one of the principal founders of the Journal of Biomechanics and was a past chair of the ASME International Applied Mechanics Division. In 1972, Fung established the Biomechanics Symposium under the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. This biannual summer meeting, first held at the Georgia Institute of Technology, became the annual Summer Bioengineering Conference. Fung and colleagues were also the first to recognize the importance of residual stress on arterial mechanical behavior.[5]

Fung's Law

Fung's famous exponential strain constitutive equation for preconditioned soft tissues is

w=12[q+c(eQ1)]

with

q=aijklEijEklQ=bijklEijEkl

quadratic forms of Green-Lagrange strains Eij and aijkl, bijkl and c material constants.[6] w is a strain energy function per volume unit, which is the mechanical strain energy for a given temperature. Materials that follow this law are known as Fung-elastic.[7]

Honors and awards

Fung was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences (1993),[13] the National Academy of Engineering (1979),[14] the Institute of Medicine (1991),[15] the Academia Sinica (1968),[16] and was a Foreign Member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (1994 election).

References

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