Strain rate-dependent failure mechanics of the intervertebral disc under tension/compression and constitutive analysis

The intervertebral disc exhibits not only strain rate dependence (viscoelasticity), but also significant asymmetry under tensile and compressive loads, which is of great significance for understanding the mechanism of lumbar disc injury under physiological loads. In this study, the strain rate sensi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical engineering & physics 2024-05, Vol.127, p.104158, Article 104158
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Qing, Zhang, Han-Lin, Zhang, Yu-Lin, Wang, Shuo, Feng, Xiao-Qing, Li, Kun, Zhang, Chun-Qiu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The intervertebral disc exhibits not only strain rate dependence (viscoelasticity), but also significant asymmetry under tensile and compressive loads, which is of great significance for understanding the mechanism of lumbar disc injury under physiological loads. In this study, the strain rate sensitive and tension-compression asymmetry of the intervertebral disc were analyzed by experiments and constitutive equation. The Sheep intervertebral disc samples were divided into three groups, in order to test the strain rate sensitive mechanical behavior, and the internal displacement as well as pressure distribution. The tensile stiffness is one order of magnitude smaller than the compression stiffness, and the logarithm of the elastic modulus is approximately linear with the logarithm of the strain rate, showing obvious tension-compression asymmetry and rate-related characteristics. In addition, the sensitivity to the strain rate is the same under these two loading conditions. The stress–strain curves of unloading and loading usually do not coincide, and form a Mullins effect hysteresis loop. The radial displacement distribution is opposite between the anterior and posterior region, which is consistent with the stress distribution. By introducing the damage factor into ZWT constitutive equation, the rate-dependent viscoelastic and weakening behavior of the intervertebral disc can be well described.
ISSN:1350-4533
1873-4030
1873-4030
DOI:10.1016/j.medengphy.2024.104158