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Fracture Mechanics of Cortical Bone

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  • Fracture Mechanics of Cortical Bone

    Dear Biomch-l Readers,

    I am a Ph.D. engineering candidate at North
    Dakota State University, U.S.A. My dissertation
    involves cortical bone fracture mechanics. If anyone
    would like more information regarding this work, have
    suggestions on funding sources (estimated at $3465.),
    or perhaps be interested in critically reviewing the
    proposal, please contact me.

    I am also interested in learning of teaching,
    research and post-doctoral positions for which this
    work may be appropriate background. Please find the
    dissertation title and abstract attached.

    Thank you very much for your time!

    Sincerely, James P. Bartlett
    Graduate Teaching Fellow
    Department of Mechanical Engineering
    and Applied Mechanics
    North Dakota State University
    Fargo, North Dakota 58105, USA
    (701) 237-8835


    MICRO-STRESS CONCENTRATIONS AND CRITICAL STRESS
    INTENSITY FACTORS OF CORTICAL BONE BY
    FRACTIONAL FRINGE MOIRE' INTERFEROMETRY

    The occurrence of accidental bone fracture together with
    the increased demand for bone and joint prostheses with long term
    reliability have made the evaluation of cortical bone critical
    stress-intensity factors important. Cortical bone micro-
    stress and fracture characteristics with their related
    morphology are not fully understood which, as a matter of course,
    results in sub-optimal prosthesis design.
    Recently, the highly sensitive displacement field
    measurement technique called fractional fringe moire'
    interferometry (FFMI) was validated by Bastawros &
    Voloshin, 1989. This technique has successfully
    measured thermal strain in electronic packages and
    determined mixed mode stress-intensity factors in PMMA
    (plexiglass). The high sensitivity (.417 micron per
    fringe order) of FFMI is the key to its usefulness in
    studying cortical bone.
    This work has two objectives. The first
    objective is to measure micro-stress concentrations
    around Haversian canals and osteons in bovine cortical
    femoral bone using FFMI. From the location and
    orientation of these stress concentrations, the number
    of likely micro-fracture sites can be identified. The
    second objective is to measure mode I critical stress
    intensity factors in small specimens of bovine femoral
    cortical bone and correlate these values to stress
    concentrations. This will facilitate future studies
    of critical stress-intensity in small human bones.
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