The Influence of the Specimen Shape and Loading Conditions on the Parameter Identification of a Viscoelastic Brain Model

Files

TR Number

Date

2013

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Abstract

The mechanical properties of brain under various loadings have been reported in the literature over the past 50 years. Step-and-hold tests have often been employed to characterize viscoelastic and nonlinear behavior of brain under high-rate shear deformation; however, the identification of brain material parameters is typically performed by neglecting the initial strain ramp and/or by assuming a uniform strain distribution in the brain samples. Using finite element (FE) simulations of shear tests, this study shows that these simplifications have a significant effect on the identified material properties in the case of cylindrical human brain specimens. Material models optimized using only the stress relaxation curve under predict the shear force during the strain ramp, mainly due to lower values of their instantaneous shear moduli. Similarly, material models optimized using an analytical approach, which assumes a uniform strain distribution, under predict peak shear forces in FE simulations. Reducing the specimen height showed to improve the model prediction, but no improvements were observed for cubic samples with heights similar to cylindrical samples. Models optimized using FE simulations show the closest response to the test data, so a FE-based optimization approach is recommended in future parameter identification studies of brain.

Description

Keywords

finite-element model, pedestrian protection, shear deformation, tissue, injury, compression, mathematical & computational biology

Citation

Costin D. Untaroiu, "The Influence of the Specimen Shape and Loading Conditions on the Parameter Identification of a Viscoelastic Brain Model," Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine, vol. 2013, Article ID 460413, 7 pages, 2013. doi:10.1155/2013/460413