CORTICAL OSTEON STIFFNESS: A COMPARATIVE MICROMECHANICS-BASED HOMOGENIZATION STUDY

dc.contributor.authorHage, Ilige S.
dc.contributor.authorSeif, Charbel Y.
dc.contributor.authorHamade, Ramsey F.
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Mechanical Engineering
dc.contributor.facultyMaroun Semaan Faculty of Engineering and Architecture (MSFEA)
dc.contributor.institutionAmerican University of Beirut
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-24T11:33:02Z
dc.date.available2025-01-24T11:33:02Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.description.abstractThis work utilizes a novel combination of automated image segmentation and numerical homogenization solutions to provide accurate estimates of stiffness of cortical bone. Segmentation of actual cortical bone digital images (20×) pro-vides for high-fidelity capture of lacunar-canaliculi (L-C) microstructure which, in turn, serves as geometric input to the numerical homogenization solution of osteon stiffness. Osteons are treated as lamella matrix punctuated by porous L-C inclusions namely: Haversian canals, lacunae, and canaliculi clusters. Using image segmentation, extracted geometric attributes are calculated for each individual pore within the matrix including the inclusion’s area, elliptical major–minor axis length (aspect ratio), orientation, and location coordinates. Consequently, aggregate secondary os-teons attributes such as area and volume fractions are calculated. Numerically, solutions of the axial Young’s modulus of the cortical osteon are obtained using the established homogenization methods of Mori–Tanaka (MT) and the generalized self-consistent method (GSCM). Solutions are also obtained using the authors’ own recent development dubbed the generalized stiffness formulation (GSF). To corroborate the numerical results, experimental micro-indentations hardness measurements are conducted on the same image locations in the secondary osteons. It is found that the axial Young’s modulus of the cortical osteon’s matrix decreases with increasing porosity (volume fraction) and aspect ratio. Although all three homogenization methods returned numerical estimates close to experimentally measured stiffness values from micro-indentation tests, the GSF stiffness results exhibit closer agreements. This is attributed to the fact that GSF, in addition to considering the inclusions’ classical variables of area and shape, accounts for the geometric attributes of orientation and position of each of the actually segmented porosities in the osteon. © 2021 by Begell House.
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1615/IntJMultCompEng.2021034412
dc.identifier.eid2-s2.0-85125657889
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10938/27921
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherBegell House Inc.
dc.relation.ispartofInternational Journal for Multiscale Computational Engineering
dc.sourceScopus
dc.subjectBone
dc.subjectCortical porosity
dc.subjectHardness
dc.subjectHomogenization
dc.subjectMicroscale
dc.subjectOsteon
dc.subjectStiffness
dc.subjectAspect ratio
dc.subjectGeometry
dc.subjectHomogenization method
dc.subjectImage segmentation
dc.subjectIndentation
dc.subjectNumerical methods
dc.subjectPorosity
dc.subjectVolume fraction
dc.subjectAspect-ratio
dc.subjectCortical bone
dc.subjectGeometric attributes
dc.subjectImages segmentations
dc.subjectMatrix
dc.subjectNumerical homogenisation
dc.subjectOsteons
dc.titleCORTICAL OSTEON STIFFNESS: A COMPARATIVE MICROMECHANICS-BASED HOMOGENIZATION STUDY
dc.typeArticle

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