Micromechanical modelling of transverse fracture behaviour of lamellar bone using a phase-field damage model: The role of non-collagenous proteins and mineralised collagen fibrils

In this study, a two-dimensional micromechanics damage-based representative volume element (RVE) of lamellar bone was developed, which included a novel implementation of a phase-field damage model to describe the behaviour of non-collagenous proteins at mineral-mineral and mineral-fibril interface regions. It was found that, while the stiffness of the tissue was governed by the relative proportion of extra-fibrillar mineral and mineralised collagen fibrils, the strength and toughness of the tissue in transverse direction relied on the interactions occurring at mineral-mineral and mineral-fibril interfaces, highlighting the prominence of non-collagenous proteins in determine fracture-based processes at this scale. While fractures tended to initiate in mineral rich areas of the extra-fibrillar mineral matrix, it was found that the presence of mineralised collagen fibrils at low density did not provide a substantial contribution to crack propagation behaviour under transverse loading. However, at physiological volume fraction (VfMCF=50%), different scenarios could arise depending on the relative strength value of the interphase around the MCFs ( [Formula: see text] ) to the interphase between individual minerals ( [Formula: see text] ): (i) When [Formula: see text] , MCFs appear to facilitate crack propagation with MCF-mineral debonding being the dominant failure mode; (ii) once γ>1, the MCFs hinder the microcracks, leading to inhibition of crack propagation, which can be re...
Source: Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials - Category: Materials Science Authors: Source Type: research