论文标题
适应后骨骼抗断裂性的数值研究
Numerical investigation into fracture resistance of bone following adaptation
论文作者
论文摘要
骨骼适应其机械环境。骨密度的这种演变是发展裂缝抗性的最重要机制之一。提出了用于模拟骨适应的有限元框架,通常称为骨重塑。接下来是一种新的方法,既可以量化骨折抗性和模拟断裂传播。作者先前在应用构型骨折的应用上应用的工作扩展了,以包括异质骨密度分布的影响。这种方法的主要优点是,构型力和断裂能释放速率仅以淋巴结量表示。这种方法避免了进行后处理的需求,并实现了对不断发展的裂纹前沿建模的完全隐含的配方。在本文中,密度磁场是通过(a)骨适应分析和(b)从CT扫描获得的主体特定几何形状和材料特性产生的。结果表明,为了正确评估裂纹正面的构型力,必须具有比在有限元网格上直接近似的空间光滑密度场具有更高的规律性。因此,使用移动的加权最小二乘法将离散密度数据近似为平滑密度场。使用用于骨适应和随后的裂纹传播的数值模拟,包括考虑马第三元骨骨,证明了该框架的性能。骨适应程度显示出会影响骨折耐药性和所得裂纹路径。
Bone adapts in response to its mechanical environment. This evolution of bone density is one of the most important mechanisms for developing fracture resistance. A finite element framework for simulating bone adaptation, commonly called bone remodelling, is presented. This is followed by a novel method to both quantify fracture resistance and to simulate fracture propagation. The authors' previous work on the application of configurational mechanics for modelling fracture is extended to include the influence of heterogeneous bone density distribution. The main advantage of this approach is that configurational forces, and fracture energy release rate, are expressed exclusively in terms of nodal quantities. This approach avoids the need for post-processing and enables a fully implicit formulation for modelling the evolving crack front. In this paper density fields are generated from both (a) bone adaptation analysis and (b) subject-specific geometry and material properties obtained from CT scans. It is shown that, in order to correctly evaluate the configurational forces at the crack front, it is necessary to have a spatially smooth density field with higher regularity than if the field is directly approximated on the finite element mesh. Therefore, discrete density data is approximated as a smooth density field using a Moving Weighted Least Squares method. Performance of the framework is demonstrated using numerical simulations for bone adaptation and subsequent crack propagation, including consideration of an equine 3rd metacarpal bone. The degree of bone adaption is shown to influence both fracture resistance and the resulting crack path.