Numerical investigation into fracture resistance of bone following adaptation
Karol Lewandowski, {\L}ukasz Kaczmarczyk, Ignatios Athanasiadis, John, F. Marshall, Chris J. Pearce

TL;DR
This paper presents a finite element framework that models bone adaptation and fracture propagation, incorporating heterogeneous density distributions to better predict fracture resistance and crack paths in bones.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method combining bone adaptation analysis with configurational mechanics for fracture simulation, including a fully implicit crack front evolution approach.
Findings
Bone adaptation influences fracture resistance.
Heterogeneous density distribution affects crack paths.
Smooth density fields are essential for accurate force evaluation.
Abstract
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…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFatigue and fracture mechanics · Elasticity and Material Modeling · Orthopaedic implants and arthroplasty
