confined compression
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2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (20) ◽  
pp. 11200
Author(s):  
Jasmijn V. Korpershoek ◽  
Mylène de Ruijter ◽  
Bastiaan F. Terhaard ◽  
Michella H. Hagmeijer ◽  
Daniël B.F. Saris ◽  
...  

Meniscus injury and meniscectomy are strongly related to osteoarthritis, thus there is a clinical need for meniscus replacement. The purpose of this study is to create a meniscus scaffold with micro-scale circumferential and radial fibres suitable for a one-stage cell-based treatment. Poly-caprolactone-based scaffolds with three different architectures were made using melt electrowriting (MEW) technology and their in vitro performance was compared with scaffolds made using fused-deposition modelling (FDM) and with the clinically used Collagen Meniscus Implants® (CMI®). The scaffolds were seeded with meniscus and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in fibrin gel and cultured for 28 d. A basal level of proteoglycan production was demonstrated in MEW scaffolds, the CMI®, and fibrin gel control, yet within the FDM scaffolds less proteoglycan production was observed. Compressive properties were assessed under uniaxial confined compression after 1 and 28 d of culture. The MEW scaffolds showed a higher Young’s modulus when compared to the CMI® scaffolds and a higher yield point compared to FDM scaffolds. This study demonstrates the feasibility of creating a wedge-shaped meniscus scaffold with MEW using medical-grade materials and seeding the scaffold with a clinically-feasible cell number and -type for potential translation as a one-stage treatment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (20) ◽  
pp. 9405
Author(s):  
Raphaël Bulle ◽  
Gioacchino Alotta ◽  
Gregorio Marchiori ◽  
Matteo Berni ◽  
Nicola F. Lopomo ◽  
...  

In this study, we observe that the poromechanical parameters in human meniscus vary spatially throughout the tissue. The response is anisotropic and the porosity is functionally graded. To draw these conclusions, we measured the anisotropic permeability and the “aggregate modulus” of the tissue, i.e., the stiffness of the material at equilibrium, after the interstitial fluid has ceased flowing. We estimated those parameters within the central portion of the meniscus in three directions (i.e., vertical, radial and circumferential) by fitting an enhanced model on stress relation confined compression tests. We noticed that a classical biphasic model was not sufficient to reproduce the observed experimental behaviour. We propose a poroelastic model based on the assumption that the fluid flow inside the human meniscus is described by a fractional porous medium equation analogous to Darcy’s law, which involves fractional operators. The fluid flux is then time-dependent for a constant applied pressure gradient (in contrast with the classical Darcy’s law, which describes a time independent fluid flux relation). We show that a fractional poroelastic model is well-suited to describe the flow within the meniscus and to identify the associated parameters (i.e., the order of the time derivative and the permeability). The results indicate that mean values of λβ,β in the central body are λβ=5.5443×10−10m4Ns1−β, β=0.0434, while, in the posterior and anterior regions, are λβ=2.851×10−10m4Ns1−β, β=0.0326 and λβ=1.2636×10−10m4Ns1−β, β=0.0232, respectively. Furthermore, numerical simulations show that the fluid flux diffusion is facilitated in the central part of the meniscus and hindered in the posterior and anterior regions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 856 (1) ◽  
pp. 012033
Author(s):  
Maki J. Al-Waily ◽  
Namir K.S. Al-Saoudi ◽  
Maysa S. Al-Qaisi

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Conner J. C. Adams ◽  
Neal R. Iverson ◽  
Christian Helanow ◽  
Lucas K. Zoet ◽  
Charlotte E. Bate

Ice at depth in ice-stream shear margins is thought to commonly be temperate, with interstitial meltwater that softens ice. Models that include this softening extrapolate results of a single experimental study in which ice effective viscosity decreased by a factor of ∼3 over water contents of ∼0.01–0.8%. Modeling indicates this softening by water localizes strain in shear margins and through shear heating increases meltwater at the bed, enhancing basal slip. To extend data to higher water contents, we shear lab-made ice in confined compression with a large ring-shear device. Ice rings with initial mean grain sizes of 2–4 mm are kept at the pressure-melting temperature and sheared at controlled rates with peak stresses of ∼0.06–0.20 MPa, spanning most of the estimated shear-stress range in West Antarctic shear margins. Final mean grain sizes are 8–13 mm. Water content is measured by inducing a freezing front at the ice-ring edges, tracking its movement inward with thermistors, and fitting the data with solutions of the relevant Stefan problem. Results indicate two creep regimes, below and above a water content of ∼0.6%. Comparison of effective viscosity values in secondary creep with those of tertiary creep from the earlier experimental study indicate that for water contents of 0.2–0.6%, viscosity in secondary creep is about twice as sensitive to water content than for ice sheared to tertiary creep. Above water contents of 0.6%, viscosity values in secondary creep are within 25% of those of tertiary creep, suggesting a stress-limiting mechanism at water contents greater than 0.6% that is insensitive to ice fabric development in tertiary creep. At water contents of ∼0.6–1.7%, effective viscosity is independent of water content, and ice is nearly linear-viscous. Minimization of intercrystalline stress heterogeneity by grain-scale melting and refreezing at rates that approach an upper bound as grain-boundary water films thicken might account for the two regimes.


Author(s):  
Muhammad Naveed ◽  

Although mechanical properties of soil are fast and easy to measure, they have not been used as indicators of soil health apart from cone penetration resistance. The confined compression test is traditionally used for the prediction of soil compaction risks. Other mechanical tests such as soil rheometry, miniature indentation test, and tensile strength are used for assessing the impact of certain amendments on the stability of the soil. Rheological techniques are appropriate to investigate microstructural stability of soil on a particle-particle scale. Miniature indentation test is very useful to perform when mechanical properties of soil are required to measure at the mm scale. Measurement of the tensile strength of soil has an advantage as it eliminates the effect of water content. There is clearly a need for more practical and rigorous testing on comparing different mechanical properties of the soil to test how they perform relative to each other.


Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 532
Author(s):  
Covadonga Quintana-Barcia ◽  
Cristina Rodríguez ◽  
Guillermo Álvarez ◽  
Antonio Maestro

Customizing any trauma surgery requires prior planning by surgeons. Nowadays, the use of numerical tools is increasingly needed to facilitate this planning. The success of this analysis begins with the definition of all the mechanical constitutive models of the materials implied. Our target is the trabecular bone because almost all trauma surgeries are closely related to it. This work focuses on the experimental characterization of porcine trabecular tibiae and defining its best constitutive model. Therefore, different types of compression tests were performed with tibia samples. Once the potential constitutive models were defined, stress–strain state from numerical approaches were compared with the corresponding experimental results. Experimental results from uniaxial compression tests showed than trabecular bone exhibits clear anisotropy with more stiffness and strength when it is loaded in the tibia longitudinal direction. Results from confined compression tests confirmed that the plastic behavior of trabecular bone depends on the hydrostatic and deviatoric invariants, so an alternative formulation (crushable foam volumetric (CFV)) has been proposed to describe its behavior. A new method to obtain CFV characteristic parameters has been developed and validated. Predictions of the CFV model better describe trabecular bone mechanical behavior under confined conditions. In other cases, classical plasticity formulations work better.


2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
C Quintana Barcia ◽  
C Rodríguez González ◽  
C Betegón Biempica ◽  
G Álvarez Díaz ◽  
A Maestro

Abstract INTRODUCTION The number of variables that influence the success of an ACL reconstruction is such that, the use of numerical tools becomes increasingly necessary. In this work, a finite element model is developed to simulate the ACL reconstruction in its tibial insertion. MATERIAL AND METHODS Tibiae and ligaments porcine samples were used in this work. As the tibial fixation, an interference screw with a nominal diameter of 7mm and a length of 25mm is used. The plasty which replace the injured ligament was characterize using tensile tests. Uniaxial and confined compression tests, as well as indentation tests, were used for characterizing trabecular bone. Finite element methods were used for the implementation of the ACL reconstruction simulation, which studies the effect in the knee joint of all the elements involved (plasty, bone and interference screw). RESULTS None of the models available for the description of the trabecular bone behavior (von Mises, Hill and Crushable Foam), is capable of doing it in a completely proper manner. The use of one or the other constitutive model does not greatly influence the numerical simulation results. CONCLUSIONS As trabecular bone has a strongly anisotropic and non-symmetric mechanical behavior, none of the constitutive models available in the finite element code used is capable of fully describing it. Thus, the use of von Mises criterion is recommended, as it is the easiest to define and the one that requires the least numerical resources (lower computational cost).


2021 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
pp. 104075
Author(s):  
Hui Jiang ◽  
Yuan-De Zhou ◽  
Jin-Ting Wang ◽  
Chu-Han Zhang

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