Department of Biomedical Engineering, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC 27101, USA.
Army Research Directorate., DEVCOM Army Research Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21005, USA.
Mil Med. 2024 Aug 19;189(Suppl 3):539-545. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usae181.
High-rate non-penetrating blunt impacts to the thorax, such as from impacts to protective equipment, can lead to a wide range of thoracic injuries. These injuries can include rib fractures, lung contusions, and abdominal organ contusions. Ovine animals have been used to study such impacts, in a variety of ways, including in silico. To properly model these impacts in silico, it is imperative that the tissues impacted are properly characterized. The objective of this study is to characterize and validate two tissues impacted that are adjacent to the point of impact-costal cartilage and hide. Heretofore, these materials have not been characterized for use in computational models despite their nearly immediate engagement in the high-rate, non-penetrating loading environment.
Ovine costal cartilage and hide samples were procured from a local abattoir following USDA regulations. Costal cartilage samples were then cut into ASTM D638 Type V tensile coupons and compressive disks for testing. The cartilage tensile coupons were tested at 150 ε/s, and the compressive samples were tested at -150 ε/s. Identical coupons and disks were then simulated in LS-Dyna using a hyperelastic material model based on test data and experimental boundary conditions. Hide samples were shaved and cut into ASTM D638 Type V tensile coupons and validated in silico using identical boundary conditions and an Ogden rubber model based on test data.
The structural responses of costal cartilage and hide are presented and exhibit typical behavior for biological specimens. The respective model fits in LS-Dyna were a hyperelastic- based "simplified rubber" for the costal cartilage and an Ogden rubber for the hide. The costal cartilage had a mean failure strain of 0.094 ± 0.040 in tension and -0.1755 ± 0.0642 in compression. The costal cartilage was also noted to have an order-of-magnitude difference in the stresses observed experimentally between the tensile and compressive experiments. Hide had a mean failure strain of 0.2358 ± 0.1362. The energies for all three simulations showed material stability.
Overall, we successfully characterized the mechanical behavior of the hide and costal cartilage in an ovine model. The data are intended for use in computational analogs of the ovine model for testing non-penetrating blunt impact in silico. To improve upon these models, rate sensitivity should be included, which will require additional mechanical testing.
高速非穿透性钝器撞击胸部,如撞击到防护装备,可能导致广泛的胸部损伤。这些损伤包括肋骨骨折、肺挫伤和腹部器官挫伤。绵羊动物已被用于以多种方式研究此类撞击,包括计算机模拟。为了在计算机模拟中正确模拟这些撞击,必须对所撞击的组织进行适当的特征描述。本研究的目的是对与撞击点相邻的两种组织进行特征描述和验证-肋软骨和皮革。迄今为止,尽管这些材料几乎立即参与到高速、非穿透性加载环境中,但它们尚未在计算模型中得到特征描述。
根据美国农业部的规定,从当地屠宰场采集绵羊肋软骨和皮革样本。然后将肋软骨样本切割成 ASTM D638 型 V 拉伸试件和压缩圆盘进行测试。软骨拉伸试件以 150ε/s 的速度进行测试,压缩试件以-150ε/s 的速度进行测试。然后,使用基于测试数据和实验边界条件的超弹性材料模型,在 LS-Dyna 中模拟相同的试件和圆盘。将皮革样本剃光并切割成 ASTM D638 型 V 拉伸试件,并使用基于测试数据的相同边界条件和 Ogden 橡胶模型进行计算机模拟验证。
呈现了肋软骨和皮革的结构响应,表现出生物样本的典型行为。在 LS-Dyna 中的相应模型拟合分别是肋软骨的基于超弹性的“简化橡胶”和皮革的 Ogden 橡胶。肋软骨在拉伸中的平均失效应变是 0.094±0.040,在压缩中的平均失效应变是-0.1755±0.0642。还注意到肋软骨在拉伸和压缩实验中观察到的实验应力之间存在数量级差异。皮革的平均失效应变是 0.2358±0.1362。所有三个模拟的能量都显示出材料的稳定性。
总体而言,我们成功地对绵羊模型中的皮革和肋软骨的力学行为进行了特征描述。这些数据旨在用于绵羊模型的非穿透性钝器撞击的计算机模拟中。为了改进这些模型,应该包括速率敏感性,这将需要额外的力学测试。