A multiscale data-driven approach for bone tissue biomechanics
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Abstract
The data-driven methodology with application to continuum mechanics
relies upon two main pillars: (i) experimental characterization of stress-strain
pairs associated to di erent loading states, and (ii) numerical elaboration
of the elasticity equations as an optimization (searching) algorithm using
compatibility and equilibrium as constraints. The purpose of this work is
to implement a multiscale data-driven approach using experimental data of
cortical bone tissue at di erent scales. First, horse cortical bone samples are
biaxially loaded and the strain elds are recorded over a region of interest
using a digital image correlation technique. As a result, both microscopic
strain elds and macroscopic strain states are obtained by a homogenization
procedure, associated to macroscopic stress loading states which are considered
uniform along the sample. This experimental outcome is here referred as
a multiscale dataset. Second, the proposed multiscale data-driven methodology
is implemented and analyzed in an example of application. Results are
presented both in the macroscopic and microscopic scales, with the latter
considered just as a post-process step in the formulation. The macroscopic
results show non-smooth strain and stress patterns as a consequence of the
tissue heterogeneity which suggest that a preassumed linear homogeneous orthotropic
model may be inaccurate for bone tissue. Microscopic results show uctuating strain elds {as a consequence of the interaction and evolution
of the microconstituents{ an order of magnitude higher than the averaged
macroscopic solution, which evidences the need of a multiscale approach for
the mechanical analysis of cortical bone, since the driving force of many
biological bone processes is local at the microstructural level. Finally, the
proposed multiscale data-driven technique may also be an adequate strategy
for the solution of intractable large size multiscale FE2 computational
approaches since the solution at the microscale is obtained as a postprocessing.
As a main conclusion, the proposed multiscale data-driven methodology
is a useful alternative to overcome limitations in the continuum mechanical
study of the bone tissue. This methodology may also be considered as a useful
strategy for the analysis of additional biological or technological hierarchical
multiscale materials.
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Bibliographic citation
Mora-Macías, J., Ayensa-Jiménez, J., Reina-Romo, E., Doweidar, M. H., Domínguez, J., Doblaré, M., & Sanz-Herrera, J. A. (2020). A multiscale data-driven approach for bone tissue biomechanics. In Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (Vol. 368, p. 113136). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cma.2020.113136






