scholarly journals Damage in biocomposites: Stiffness evolution of aligned plant fibre composites during monotonic and cyclic fatigue loading

Author(s):  
Darshil U. Shah
2022 ◽  
pp. 1-9

OBJECTIVE The traditional anterior approach for multilevel severe cervical ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament (OPLL) is demanding and risky. Recently, a novel surgical procedure—anterior controllable antedisplacement and fusion (ACAF)—was introduced by the authors to deal with these problems and achieve better clinical outcomes. However, to the authors’ knowledge, the immediate and long-term biomechanical stability obtained after this procedure has never been evaluated. Therefore, the authors compared the postoperative biomechanical stability of ACAF with those of more traditional approaches: anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) and anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion (ACCF). METHODS To determine and assess pre- and postsurgical range of motion (ROM) (2 Nm torque) in flexion-extension, lateral bending, and axial rotation in the cervical spine, the authors collected cervical areas (C1–T1) from 18 cadaveric spines. The cyclic fatigue loading test was set up with a 3-Nm cycled load (2 Hz, 3000 cycles). All samples used in this study were randomly divided into three groups according to surgical procedures: ACDF, ACAF, and ACCF. The spines were tested under the following conditions: 1) intact state flexibility test; 2) postoperative model (ACDF, ACAF, ACCF) flexibility test; 3) cyclic loading (n = 3000); and 4) fatigue model flexibility test. RESULTS After operations were performed on the cadaveric spines, the segmental and total postoperative ROM values in all directions showed significant reductions for all groups. Then, the ROMs tended to increase during the fatigue test. No significant crossover effect was detected between evaluation time and operation method. Therefore, segmental and total ROM change trends were parallel among the three groups. However, the postoperative and fatigue ROMs in the ACCF group tended to be larger in all directions. No significant differences between these ROMs were detected in the ACDF and ACAF groups. CONCLUSIONS This in vitro biomechanical study demonstrated that the biomechanical stability levels for ACAF and ACDF were similar and were both significantly greater than that of ACCF. The clinical superiority of ACAF combined with our current results showed that this procedure is likely to be an acceptable alternative method for multilevel cervical OPLL treatment.


Author(s):  
T Davis ◽  
J Ding ◽  
W Sun ◽  
S B Leen

In this study, the phenomenon of residual stress relaxation from foreign object damage (FOD) is numerically simulated using a hybrid explicit—implicit finite-element method. The effects of cycle fatigue loadings on stress relaxation were studied. FOD is first simulated by firing a 3mm cube impacting onto a plate made of titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V at 200m/s. The FOD impact produces two distinct stress concentrations: one is compressive directly beneath the impact site; the other is tensile around the outer edge of the impact. The plate was then assumed to be subjected to a cyclic fatigue loading. The stress relaxation was investigated under a range of stress ratios and maximum applied stresses. Two different material models were considered for the simulations, namely an elastic—perfectly plastic model and a non-linear kinematic hardening model.


Author(s):  
Osama M. Jadaan ◽  
K. C. Liu ◽  
H. Pih

Abstract Progressive damage due to tension-tension cyclic fatigue loading for three distinct ceramic materials was evaluated using the acoustic emission (AE) technique. The objective of this study was to determine the capabilities of the AE method to detect the imminence of failure and to locate potential fracture sites. Results indicated that the AE technique was capable of predicting failure by showing an increase in energy/count rate prior to failure. Although potential fracture sites can be identified, exact location of the final fracture site can be known only when catastrophic failure takes place.


Author(s):  
T. D. Marusich ◽  
S. Usui ◽  
R. J. McDaniel

Controlling residual stress in machined workpiece surfaces is necessary in situations where service requirements subject structural members to cyclic fatigue loading. It is desirable to have a predictive capability when attempting to optimize machined parts for cost while taking into account residual stress considerations. One such method of machining modeling is application of the finite element method (FEM). A three-dimensional FEM model is presented which includes fully adaptive unstructured mesh generation, tight thermo-mechanically coupling, deformable tool-chip-workpiece contact, interfacial heat transfer across the tool-chip boundary, momentum effects at high speeds and constitutive models appropriate for high strain rate, finite deformation analyses. The FEM model is applied to nose turning operations with stationary tools. To substantiate the efficacy of numerical and constitutive formulations used, metal cutting tests are performed, residual stress profiles collected, and validation comparison is made.


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