Considerable progress has been made in understanding implant wear and developing numerical models to predict wear for new orthopaedic devices. However any model of wear could be improved through a more accurate representation of the biomaterial mechanics, including time-varying dynamic and inelastic behaviour such as viscosity and plastic deformation. In particular, most computational models of wear of UHMWPE implement a time-invariant version of Archard's law that links the volume of worn material to the contact pressure between the metal implant and the polymeric tibial insert. During in-vivo conditions, however, the contact area is a time-varying quantity and is therefore dependent upon the dynamic deformation response of the material. From this observation one can conclude that creep deformations of UHMWPE may be very important to consider when conducting computational wear analyses, in stark contrast to what can be found in the literature. In this study, different numerical modelling techniques are compared with experimental creep testing on a unicondylar knee replacement system in a physiologically representative context. Linear elastic, plastic and time-varying visco-dynamic models are benchmarked using literature data to predict contact deformations, pressures and areas. The aim of this study is to elucidate the contributions of viscoelastic and plastic effects on these surface quantities. It is concluded that creep deformations have a significant effect on the contact pressure measured (experiment) and calculated (computational models) at the surface of the UHMWPE unicondylar insert. The use of a purely elastoplastic constitutive model for UHMWPE lead to compressive deformations of the insert which are much smaller than those predicted by a creep-capturing viscoelastic model (and those measured experimentally). This shows again the importance of including creep behaviour into a constitutive model in order to predict the right level of surface deformation on a tibial insert. At high compressive loads, inelastic deformation mechanisms (creep and plasticity) dominate the mechanical response of UHMWPE components by altering the surface geometry (penetration depth and so contact area) and therefore the contact pressure. Although generic creep models can provide a good first approximation of material characteristics, for best accuracy both viscous and plastic effects must be captured, and model parameters must be founded upon specific experimental test data. Such high-fidelity numerical creep models will provide a better foundation for the next generation of more robust and accurate in-silico wear prediction tools.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2013.12.023 | DOI Listing |
Energy Fuels
January 2025
Geothermal Energy and Geofluids Group, Institute of Geophysics, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, ETH Zurich, Zurich 8092, Switzerland.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) and CO-based geothermal energy are promising technologies for reducing CO emissions and mitigating climate change. Safe implementation of these technologies requires an understanding of how CO interacts with fluids and rocks at depth, particularly under elevated pressure and temperature. While CO-bearing aqueous solutions in geological reservoirs have been extensively studied, the chemical behavior of water-bearing supercritical CO remains largely overlooked by academics and practitioners alike.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Migr Health
January 2025
Bielefeld University, Germany.
Background: This study aims to explore the experiences, challenges, and support given to South Asian Key Workers (food and necessary goods, Transport (delivery and taxi drivers,) working in the United Kingdom in times of the COVID-19 lockdowns between March 2020 to March 2021. The qualitative study aims to explore the experiences, challenges, and financial support given to South Asian Key Workers working in the United Kingdom in times of the COVID-19 lockdowns.
Methods: A phenomenological approach was used to explore the experiences of key workers during the COVID-19 lockdowns in the UK.
An open channel exposed core microstructured fiber is designed and fabricated for pressure and refractive index sensing. The core is on a flat platform surrounded by the cladding on which there is an open gap that allows the surrounding medium to contact the core. Due to the specially designed microstructure, the external pressure compresses the fiber core and causes changes of birefringence because of the photo-elastic effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
College of Hydraulic and Civil Engineering, Xinjiang Agricultural University, 311 East Nongda Rd, Urumqi, 830052, China.
Water conveyance channels in cold and arid regions pass through several saline-alkali soil areas. Canal water leakage exacerbates the salt expansion traits of such soil, damaging canal slope lining structures. To investigate the mechanical properties of saline clay, this study conducted indoor tests, including direct shear, compression, and permeation tests, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis of soil samples from typical sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2025
Prokhorov General Physics Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 119991, Russia.
Vanadium dioxide ([Formula: see text]) is a favorable material platform of modern optoelectronics, since it manifests the reversible temperature-induced insulator-metal transition (IMT) with an abrupt and rapid changes in the conductivity and optical properties. It makes possible applications of such a phase-change material in the ultra-fast optoelectronics and terahertz (THz) technology. Despite the considerable interest to this material, data on its broadband electrodynamic response in different states are still missing in the literature.
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