Mechanics of Biomaterials

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mechanics of Composite Materials
Advertisements

1 Thin Walled Pressure Vessels. 2 Consider a cylindrical vessel section of: L = Length D = Internal diameter t = Wall thickness p = fluid pressure inside.
Micromechanics Macromechanics Fibers Lamina Laminate Structure Matrix.
Elastic Properties and Anisotropy of Elastic Behavior.
Constitutive Relations in Solids Elasticity
APPLIED MECHANICS Lecture 10 Slovak University of Technology
Fundamentals of Elasticity Theory
Jump to first page 1 Normal stress = Chapter 2 Mechanics of Materials Example: Estimate the normal stress on a shin bone ( 脛骨 ) ATensile stress (+) Compressive.
Elastic Compliance and Stiffness constant
ECIV 520 A Structural Analysis II
Mechanics of Materials – MAE 243 (Section 002) Spring 2008 Dr. Konstantinos A. Sierros.
Finite Element Method in Geotechnical Engineering
Assist.Prof.Dr. Ahmet Erklig
Expectations after today’s lecture
MACROMECHANICS Ahmet Erkliğ.
Mechanics of Materials II
A PPLIED M ECHANICS Lecture 08 Slovak University of Technology Faculty of Material Science and Technology in Trnava.
ME 520 Fundamentals of Finite Element Analysis
Analytical Vs Numerical Analysis in Solid Mechanics Dr. Arturo A. Fuentes Created by: Krishna Teja Gudapati.
Elastic Properties of Solids, Part III Topics Discussed in Kittel, Ch. 3, pages Another Lecture Found on the Internet!
Mechanical Properties
Defining sign of stress tensor Kittel’s Fig. 15 may be confusing about sign of T xx (which he calls X x ) Stress tensor component T xx is defined as the.
1/1 SOE 1032 SOLID MECHANICS Website course organisation,lecture notes, tutorial.
Chapter 4 Material Behavior – Linear Elastic Solids
Objectives 1.Define stress & strain. 2.Utilize Hooke’s Law to calculate unknown stresses and strains. 3.Determine material parameters from a stress-strain.
Poisson’s Ratio For a slender bar subjected to axial loading:
Strengths Chapter 10 Strains. 1-1 Intro Structural materials deform under the action of forces Three kinds of deformation Increase in length called an.
Dr. Wang Xingbo Fall , 2005 Mathematical & Mechanical Method in Mechanical Engineering.
1 ME383 Modern Manufacturing Practices Lecture Note #3 Stress-Strain & Yield Criteria Dr. Y.B. Guo Mechanical Engineering The University of Alabama.
Basic biomechanics and bioacoustics
Elasticity I Ali K. Abdel-Fattah. Elasticity In physics, elasticity is a physical property of materials which return to their original shape after they.
STRESS-STRAIN RELATIONSHIP
Chapter 11 Outline Equilibrium and Elasticity
Stress and Strain ( , 3.14) MAE 316 – Strength of Mechanical Components NC State University Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering Stress.
EGM 5653 Advanced Mechanics of Materials
Expectations after this section
Boundary Value Problems in Elasticity
Strain Energy Density Hyperelasticity BME 615 University of Wisconsin.
Nonlinear Elasticity of Soft Tissues
Bone Mechanics Bone is a hard connective tissue Forms rigid skeleton
Objectives Biomechanical testing of bone. Case study on axial testing of bovine cortical bone on MTS Mechanical properties of bone and their use.
Topic 5: Bone Mechanics Bone is a hard connective tissue
Continuum Mechanics (MTH487)
Finite Element Method in Geotechnical Engineering
Topic 10: Nonlinear Elasticity of Soft Tissues
Elasticity and Viscoelasticity
Poisson’s Ratio For a slender bar subjected to axial loading:
Longitudinal Strain Flexure Formula
STRESS-STRAIN RELATIONSHIP
Continuum Mechanics (MTH487)
Elasticity Yasser Assran 27/10/2015.
Thin Walled Pressure Vessels
3 Torsion.
Questions – Elasticity and Plasticity
BDA30303 Solid Mechanics II.
Poisson’s Ratio For a slender bar subjected to axial loading:
Continuum Mechanics for Hillslopes: Part V
3 Torsion.
Ch. 2: Fundamental of Structure
Basic biomechanics and bioacoustics
326MAE (Stress and Dynamic Analysis) 340MAE (Extended Stress and Dynamic Analysis)
Elastic Properties and Anisotropy of Elastic Behavior
Elastic Properties of Solids, Part III Topics Discussed in Kittel, Ch
3 Torsion.
Mechanics of Materials Engr Lecture 21
Poisson’s Ratio For a slender bar subjected to axial loading:
Simple Stresses & Strain
Chapter 2 Mechanics of Materials
Finite element analysis of the wrinkling of orthotropic membranes
1/1 SOE 1032 SOLID MECHANICS Website course organisation,lecture notes, tutorial.
Presentation transcript:

Mechanics of Biomaterials Course Web http://www.aeromech.usyd.edu.au/people/academic/qingli/MECH4981.htm

Objectives Establish biomaterial constitutive models Determine the biomechanical response to load Analyse the prosthetic design Estimate the health status of living tissues under stress

Introductory Mechanics Model F M T Recall “Lecture 1”: statics/dynamics methods to determine force/moment/torque T M F

Dynamics analysis to determine load Introductory Mechanics Model – Stress Analysis Sport injury? Bone damage? Normal stress Motion Measurement Pure bending analysis M T F M y x z Dynamics analysis to determine load

Methods of Biomechanics Analytical Method – Solid Mechanics I and II Biomechanical Experiment – Test Numerical Techniques – FEM

Elastic Behavior Basic element representing an elastic material Hooke’s law, Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio etc Hooke’s Law (uniaxial):  the strain is directly proportional to the stress Hooke’s Law (General):  Stress tensor []  Strain tensor []  Stiffness tensor [S] (Stiffness tensor) L L  Compliance tensor [C]=[S]-1

Elastic Constants – Young’s Modulus Young’s Modulus E: Relationship between tensile or compressive stress and strain Applies for small strains (within the elastic range) Biomaterials (Isotropic) E (GPa)* Cancellous bone 0.49 Cortical bone 14.7 Long bone - Femur 17.2 Long bone - Humerus Long bone - Radius 18.6 Long bone - Tibia 18.1 Vertebrae - Cervical 0.23 Vertebrae - Lumbar 0.16 * http://www.lib.umich.edu/dentlib/Dental_tables/toc.html

Uniaxial Test – Finite Large Deformation Undeformed Configuration  length = L  Undeformed area = A Deformed Configuration  length = l  Deformed area = a L A Density  0 a F l Density  L L Cauchy Stress (True stress) Nominal Stress (Engineering Stress) Second Piola-Kirchhoff Stress

Elastic Constants – (other 4 constants) Poisson’s ratio Describe lateral deformation in response to an axial load Shear Modulus Describes relationship between applied torque and angle of deformation Bulk Modulus Describes the change in volume in response to hydrostatic pressure (equal stresses in all directions) Lame’s constant  – from tensor production

Relationship Between the Elastic Constants Young’s modulus (E) Poisson’s ratio () Bulk modulus (K) Shear modulus (G) Lame’s constant () For an isotropic material, elastic constants are CONSTANT

Hooke’s Law – Tensor Representation (1  x, 2  y, 3  z) or Remarks: Stress tensor and strain tensor are the 2nd order tensors [S] and [C] are the fourth order tensor

Hooke’s Law – Matrix Representation Compliance Matrix

Material Constitutive Models Anisotropy 21 independent components elasticity matrix Orthotropy 9 independent components to elasticity matrix Transverse isotropy 5 independent components Isotropy 2 independent components

Material Constitutive Models – Anisotropy (Most likely) 21 independent components in elasticity matrix Symmetric matrix

Material Constitutive Models – Orthotropy 9 independent components to elasticity matrix (along 3 directions) 1 2 3

Orthotropic Properties – Cortical Bone Young’s Moduli E1: 6.91 - 18.1 GPa E2 : 8.51 - 19.4 GPa E3 : 17.0 - 26.5 GPa G12: 2.41 - 7.22 GPa G13: 3.28 - 8.65 GPa G23: 3.28 - 8.67 GPa ij: 0.12 - 0.62 Shear Moduli Poisson’s Ratios Remarks: the high standard deviations in property values seen in one are not necessarily (although may possibly be) due to experimental error  E: 15%  G: 10%   : 30%

Material Constitutive Models – Transversely Isotropy 5 independent components 1 2 3

Material Constitutive Models – Isotropy 2 independent components 1 2 3

Hooke’s Law for an Isotropic Elastic Material Stress-Strain Relationship Strain-Stress Relationship

Hooke’s Law (Isotropic) – Cont’d where ij – Kronecker delta, ij =1 if i=j, otherwise (i≠j), ij =0. That is e.g.

Mechanics Model of Introductory Example en x (1) ez z (3) et

Mechanics of Introductory Example – Cont’d en x (1) ez F3 F3 z (3) et

Mechanics of Introductory Example – Cont’d Pure Bending y (2) x (1) Myy ez z (3) et Mxx Total stress in zz: x y Eccentric Axial Loading

Equilibrium Equations (General) Where: div - Divergence Dynamic equilibrium:

Biomechanical Test Method Femoral neck test Site-specific test

Finite Element Method Femur Knee Hip

CT-Based Finite Element Modelling Procedure Molar PDL FE model a) CT Image Segmentation b) Sectional curves c) CAD model d) FE model Whole Jaw model Computationally more accurate Part of model Computationally more efficient

3 unit all-ceramic dental bridge analysis Finite Element Modelling Example 3 unit all-ceramic dental bridge analysis Solid model VM stress Contour

Assignment Approximately use engineering beam theory to calculate principal stresses – 60%  Mohr circles  Nature of stress (tension or compression) Apply 3D finite element method to calculate the principal stress – 30%  Selection of elements and mesh density  Contours of principal stress  Comparison against analytical solution from Beam Theory y Section S-S y T F Fixed S B Cancellous yh R z x A r S M x Cortical l l Submission of tutorial question of callus formation mechanics – 10%