Go top
Paper information

A parametric study of hard tissue injury prediction using finite elements: consideration of geometric complexity, subfailure material properties, CT-thresholding and element characteristics

C. Arregui-Dalmases, E. Pozo de Dios, S. Duprey, F.J. López-Valdés, A. Lau, D. Subit, R. W. Kent

Traffic Injury Prevention Vol. 11, nº. 3, pp. 286 - 293

Summary:

Objective:

The objectives of this study were to examine the axial response of the clavicle under quasistatic compressions replicating the body boundary conditions and to quantify the sensitivity of finite element–predicted fracture in the clavicle to several parameters.

Methods:

Clavicles were harvested from 14 donors (age range 14–56 years). Quasistatic axial compression tests were performed using a custom rig designed to replicate in situ boundary conditions. Prior to testing, high-resolution computed tomography (CT) scans were taken of each clavicle. From those images, finite element models were constructed. Factors varied parametrically included the density used to threshold cortical bone in the CT scans, the presence of trabecular bone, the mesh density, Young's modulus, the maximum stress, and the element type (shell vs. solid, triangular vs. quadrilateral surface elements).

Results:

The experiments revealed significant variability in the peak force (2.41 ± 0.72 kN) and displacement to peak force (4.9 ± 1.1 mm), with age (p < .05) and with some geometrical traits of the specimens. In the finite element models, the failure force and location were moderately dependent upon the Young's modulus. The fracture force was highly sensitive to the yield stress (80–110 MPa).

Conclusions:

Neither fracture location nor force was strongly dependent on mesh density as long as the element size was less than 5 × 5 mm2. Both the fracture location and force were strongly dependent upon the threshold density used to define the thickness of the cortical shell.


Keywords: Finite element modeling, Fracture prediction, Clavicle, Side impact, Sensitivity study


JCR Impact Factor and WoS quartile: 1,401 (2010); 1,600 - Q3 (2023)

DOI reference: DOI icon https://doi.org/10.1080/15389581003709902

Published on paper: June 2010.

Published on-line: June 2010.



Citation:
C. Arregui-Dalmases, E. Pozo de Dios, S. Duprey, F.J. López-Valdés, A. Lau, D. Subit, R. W. Kent, A parametric study of hard tissue injury prediction using finite elements: consideration of geometric complexity, subfailure material properties, CT-thresholding and element characteristics. Traffic Injury Prevention. Vol. 11, nº. 3, pp. 286 - 293, June 2010. [Online: June 2010]


    Research topics:
  • *Mechanical Systems: Structural mechanics, Machinery components, Fast prototyping, Metrology

pdf Preview
Request Request the document to be emailed to you.