The working title for this when I was writing a presentation for the Abaqus UK RUM was ‘How I Improved a Mesh and the Results got Better’. That is probably selling things a bit short, but essentially this article is about applying well tried finite element techniques to problematic multiscale, multiphysics scenarios to achieve results in a useful timeframe – which probably goes a bit further than mesh refinement.
In some scenarios the human knee is treated as a simple hinge, like you’d find on a door. But one look at Gray’s Anatomy reveals it to be anything but a simple hinge. The two bearing surfaces are surrounded by ligaments, and between them is a compliant pad known as the meniscus. The load path through this assembly is anything but simple, and certainly nothing like a hinge. Which gives us the first clue as to the multiscale nature of this body part. At one level it’s a sort of single degree of freedom hinge, but deeper into the length scales its more complex, and gets more complex still the deeper you go.
This article appeared in the January 2023 issue of BENCHMARK
Reference | bm_jan_23_6 |
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Authors | Marks. L Barrera. O Readioff. R |
Language | English |
Type | Magazine Article |
Date | 16th January 2023 |
Organisations | Oxford Brookes University University of Oxford University of Bath |
Region | Global |
Order Ref | bm_jan_23_6 Download |
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Non-member Price | £5.00 | $6.34 | €6.00 |
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