Current finite-element (FE) models of the eardrum are limited to low pressures because of the assumption of linearity. Our objective is to investigate the effects of geometric nonlinearity in FE models of the cat eardrum with an approximately immobile malleus for pressures up to +/-2.2 kPa, which are within the range of pressures used in clinical tympanometry. Displacements computed with nonlinear models increased less than in proportion to applied pressure, similar to what is seen in measured data. In both simulations and experiments, there is a shift inferiorly in the location of maximum displacement in response to increasingly negative middle-ear pressures. Displacement patterns computed for small pressures and for large positive pressures differed from measured patterns in the position of the maximum pars-tensa displacement. Increasing the thickness of the postero-superior pars tensa in the models shifted the location of the computed maximum toward the measured location. The largest computed pars-tensa strains were mostly less than 2%, implying that a linearized material model is a reasonable approximation. Geometric nonlinearity must be considered when simulating eardrum response to high pressures because purely linear models cannot take into account the effects of changing geometry. At higher pressures, material nonlinearity may become more important.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.2188370 | DOI Listing |
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