Ashby’s
map’s role in rationally selecting materials
for optimal performance is well-established in traditional engineering
applications. However, there is a major gap in Ashby’s maps
in selecting materials for tissue engineering, which are very soft
with an elastic modulus of less than 100 kPa. To fill the gap, we
create an elastic modulus database to effectively connect soft engineering
materials with biological tissues such as the cardiac, kidney, liver,
intestine, cartilage, and brain. This soft engineering material mechanical
property database is created for widely applied agarose hydrogels
based on big-data screening and experiments conducted using ultra-low-concentration
(0.01–0.5 wt %) hydrogels. Based on that, an experimental and
analysis protocol is established for evaluating the elastic modulus
of ultra-soft engineering materials. Overall, we built a mechanical
bridge connecting soft matter and tissue engineering by fine-tuning
the agarose hydrogel concentration. Meanwhile, a soft matter scale
(degree of softness) is established to enable the manufacturing of
implantable bio-scaffolds for tissue engineering.