“…Two-dimensional treatments of the tissue as seen in cross-section [7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19] ("ribbon models" 20 ) and analytical approximations for the tortuosity associated with staggered square flakes 21 have given way to sophisticated, fully 3-dimensional numerical analyses representing corneocytes as flattened cuboids 20,22,23 and tetrakaidecahedra. 20,24 A particularly useful application of such analyses is the calculation of effective (average, homogenized, coarse-grained) diffusion coefficients of the tissue by solution of a well-defined steady-state diffusion problem posed in one unit cell of the microstructure. 6,8,9,20,[22][23][24] These calculated coefficients can be slotted into macroscopic calculators that solve for the transient distribution of solute within the SC (and also viable epidermis and dermis layers underneath) treated as homogenized slabs, assuming the geometry of the unit cell has been agreed upon.…”