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<div class="csl-entry">Stefanek, P., Pahr, D. H., & Synek, A. (2024). Comparison of simplified bone-screw interface models in materially nonlinear μFE simulations. <i>Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials</i>, <i>157</i>, 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2024.106634</div>
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dc.identifier.issn
1751-6161
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/206266
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dc.description.abstract
Micro finite-element (μFE) simulations serve as a crucial research tool to assist laboratory experiments in the biomechanical assessment of screw anchorage in bone. However, accurately modelling the interface between bone and screw threads at the microscale poses a significant challenge. Currently, the gold-standard approach involves employing computationally intensive physical contact models to simulate this interface. This study compared nonlinear μFE predictions of deformations, whole-construct stiffness, maximum force and damage patterns of three different computationally efficient simplified interface approaches to the general contact interface in Abaqus Explicit, which was defined as gold-standard and reference model. The μCT images (resolution: 32.8 μm) of two human radii with varying bone volume fractions were utilized and a screw was virtually inserted up to 50% and 100% of the volar-dorsal cortex distance. Materially nonlinear μFE models were generated and loaded in tension, compression and shear. In a first step, the common simplification of using a fully-bonded interface was compared to the general contact interface, revealing overestimations of whole-construct stiffness (19% on average) and maximum force (26% on average), along with inaccurate damage pattern replications. To enhance predictions, two additional simplified interface models were compared: tensionally strained element deletion (TED) and a novel modification of TED (TED-M). TED deletes interface elements strained in tension based on a linear-elastic simulation before the actual simulation. TED-M extends the remaining contact interface of TED by incorporating neighboring elements to the contact area. Both TED and TED-M reduced the errors in whole-construct stiffness and maximum force and improved the replication of the damage distributions in comparison to the fully-bonded approach. TED was better in predicting whole-construct stiffness (average error of 1%), while TED-M showed lowest errors in maximum force (1% on average). In conclusion, both TED and TED-M offer computationally efficient alternatives to physical contact modelling, although the fully-bonded interface may deliver sufficiently accurate predictions for many applications.
en
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
ELSEVIER
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dc.relation.ispartof
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
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dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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dc.subject
Humans
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dc.subject
Nonlinear Dynamics
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dc.subject
Mechanical Phenomena
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dc.subject
Biomechanical Phenomena
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dc.subject
Materials Testing
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dc.subject
Stress, Mechanical
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dc.subject
X-Ray Microtomography
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dc.subject
Bone-screw interface modelling
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dc.subject
Bone-screw system
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dc.subject
Materially-nonlinear explicit simulation
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dc.subject
Micro finite element modelling
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dc.subject
Finite Element Analysis
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dc.subject
Bone Screws
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dc.title
Comparison of simplified bone-screw interface models in materially nonlinear μFE simulations