4.5 Article

The multiscale meso-mechanics model of viscoelastic cortical bone

Journal

BIOMECHANICS AND MODELING IN MECHANOBIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 1713-1729

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10237-022-01615-z

Keywords

Cortical bone; Hierarchical structure; Micromechanics and homogenization; Dynamic viscoelasticity; Storage and loss modulus

Funding

  1. Pioneer and Leading Goose R&D Program of Zhejiang [2022C01143]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [12002303]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFA0711700]

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This paper establishes a multiscale micromechanics model of cortical bone and investigates the effect of microstructure on its elastic behavior. The Mori-Tanaka model and locally exact homogenization theory are introduced to homogenize the heterogeneous materials at each level. The model predicts the effective moduli of cortical bone and the results are verified against experimental data. The study also shows that hydration has a greater influence on the mechanical properties of cortical bone than aging.
Cortical bone is a complex hierarchical structure consisting of biological fiber composites with transversely isotropic constituents, whose microstructures deserve extensive study to understand the mechanism of living organisms and explore development of biomimetic materials. Based on this, we establish a three-level hierarchical structure from microscale to macroscale and propose a multiscale micromechanics model of cortical bone, which considers Haversian canal, osteonal lamellae, cement line and interstitial lamellae. In order to study the microstructural effect on the elastic behavior of hierarchical structures, the Mori-Tanaka model and locally exact homogenization theory are introduced for the homogenization of heterogeneous materials of microstructure at each level. Within sub-microscale, Haversian canal and Osteonal lamella are treated as fiber and matrix, whose homogenization is surrounded with cement line matrix in microstructure (or what we called osteon) for the second homogenization; finally, osteon and interstitial lamella establish the meso-structure for the third homogenization, predicting the effective moduli of cortical bone. The correctness of the model in this paper is verified against the data in literature with good agreement. Finally, the dynamic viscoelastic response of cortical bones is investigated from a multiscale perspective, where the measured data are substituted into the present models to study the hydration and aging effect on bones' stiffness and viscoelasticity. It is demonstrated that the hydration is much more influential in affecting the storage and loss moduli of cortical bone than the aging effect. We also present a few numerical investigations on microstructural material and geometric parameters on the overall mechanical properties of cortical bone.

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