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  4. Viscoelastic constitutive law in large deformations: application to human knee ligaments and tendons
 
research article

Viscoelastic constitutive law in large deformations: application to human knee ligaments and tendons

Pioletti, Dominique P.  
•
Rakotomanana, L. R.
•
Benvenuti, J. F.
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1998
Journal of Biomechanics

Traction tests on soft tissues show that the shape of the stress strain curves depends on the strain rate at which the tests are performed. Many of the constitutive models that have been proposed fail to properly consider the effect of the strain rate when large deformations are encountered. In the present study, a framework based on elastic and viscous potentials is developed. The resulting constitutive law is valid for large deformations and satisfies the principles of thermodynamics. Three parameters -- two for the elasticity and one for the viscosity -- were enough to precisely fit the non-linear stress strain curves obtained at different strain rates with human cruciate ligaments and patellar tendons. The identification results then in a realistic, three-dimensional viscoelastic constitutive law. The developed constitutive law can be used regardless of the strain or rotation values. It can be incorporated into a finite element program to model the viscoelastic behavior of ligaments and tendons under dynamic situations.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/S0021-9290(98)00077-3
PubMed ID

9796676

Author(s)
Pioletti, Dominique P.  
Rakotomanana, L. R.
Benvenuti, J. F.
Leyvraz, P. F.  
Date Issued

1998

Published in
Journal of Biomechanics
Volume

31

Issue

8

Start page

753

End page

7

Subjects

Algorithms

•

Anterior Cruciate Ligament/anatomy & histology/*physiology

•

Elasticity

•

Finite Element Analysis

•

Humans

•

Knee Joint

•

Models

•

Biological

•

Nonlinear Dynamics

•

Patellar Ligament/anatomy & histology/*physiology

•

Posterior Cruciate Ligament/anatomy & histology/*physiology

•

Reproducibility of Results

•

Research Support

•

Non-U.S. Gov't

•

Rotation

•

Stress

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Mechanical

•

Thermodynamics

•

Viscosity

Note

Hopital Orthopedique de la Suisse Romande, Biomedical Engineering Laboratory, Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne, Switzerland. dpiolett@bioeng.ucsd.edu

Journal Article

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBO  
Available on Infoscience
July 25, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/232659
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