Reference : Developing A Biomechanical Testing Setup Of The Pelvis, Part II - Experimental Testing
Scientific journals : Article
Engineering, computing & technology : Mechanical engineering
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/55435
Developing A Biomechanical Testing Setup Of The Pelvis, Part II - Experimental Testing
English
Soliman, Ahmed Abdelsalam Mohamed mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine (FSTM) > Department of Engineering (DoE) >]
Ricci, Pierre-Louis mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine (FSTM) > Department of Engineering (DoE)]
Kedziora, Slawomir mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine (FSTM) > Department of Engineering (DoE) >]
Kelm, Jens mailto [Chirurgisch Orthopädisches Zentrum Illingen, Illingen, Deutschland]
Gerich, Torsten mailto [Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Luxemburg > Traumatology]
Maas, Stefan mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Science, Technology and Medicine (FSTM) > Department of Engineering (DoE) >]
23-May-2023
Journal of Biomechanical Engineering
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Yes
International
0148-0731
1528-8951
New-York
United States - New York
[en] Biomechanical testbench ; Physiological loading ; Pelvic ring
[en] Biomechanical testbench emulating the physiological loading of the pelvis is crucial in developing reconstructive implants for fragility fractures of the pelvis. Additionally, it will help understand the influence of the common daily loading on the pelvic ring. However, most reported experimental studies were mainly comparative with simplified loading and boundary conditions. In (Part I - Computational Design of Experiments) of our study, we described the concept of the computational experiment design to design and construct a biomechanical testbench emulating the gait movement of the pelvis. The 57 muscles and joints' contact forces were reduced to four force actuators and one support, producing a similar stress distribution. The experimental setup is explained in this paper (Part II - Experimental Testing), and some experimental results are presented. In addition, a series of repeatability and reproducibility tests were conducted to assess the test stand capabilities of replicating the gait physiological loading. The calculated stresses and the experimentally recorded strains showed that the pelvic ring response to the loading always follows the loaded leg side during the gait cycle. Furthermore, the experimental results of the pelvis displacement and strain at selected locations match the numerical ones. The developed test stand and the concept of computational experiment design behind it provide guidelines on how to design biomechanical testing equipment with physiological relevance.
This research is funded by the Department of Engineering of the University of Luxembourg
Researchers ; Professionals ; Students ; General public
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/55435
10.1115/1.4062578

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