Development of a Human Cranial Bone Surrogate for Impact Studies

In order to replicate the fracture behavior of the intact human skull under impact it becomes necessary to develop a material having the mechanical properties of cranial bone. The most important properties to replicate in a surrogate human skull were found to be the fracture toughness and tensile st...

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Published inFrontiers in bioengineering and biotechnology Vol. 1; p. 13
Main Authors Roberts, Jack C., Merkle, Andrew C., Carneal, Catherine M., Voo, Liming M., Johannes, Matthew S., Paulson, Jeff M., Tankard, Sara, Uy, O. Manny
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 2013
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ISSN2296-4185
2296-4185
DOI10.3389/fbioe.2013.00013

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Summary:In order to replicate the fracture behavior of the intact human skull under impact it becomes necessary to develop a material having the mechanical properties of cranial bone. The most important properties to replicate in a surrogate human skull were found to be the fracture toughness and tensile strength of the cranial tables as well as the bending strength of the three-layer (inner table-diplöe-outer table) architecture of the human skull. The materials selected to represent the surrogate cranial tables consisted of two different epoxy resins systems with random milled glass fiber to enhance the strength and stiffness and the materials to represent the surrogate diplöe consisted of three low density foams. Forty-one three-point bending fracture toughness tests were performed on nine material combinations. The materials that best represented the fracture toughness of cranial tables were then selected and formed into tensile samples and tested. These materials were then used with the two surrogate diplöe foam materials to create the three-layer surrogate cranial bone samples for three-point bending tests. Drop tower tests were performed on flat samples created from these materials and the fracture patterns were very similar to the linear fractures in pendulum impacts of intact human skulls, previously reported in the literature. The surrogate cranial tables had the quasi-static fracture toughness and tensile strength of 2.5 MPa√ m and 53 ± 4.9 MPa, respectively, while the same properties of human compact bone were 3.1 ± 1.8 MPa√ m and 68 ± 18 MPa, respectively. The cranial surrogate had a quasi-static bending strength of 68 ± 5.7 MPa, while that of cranial bone was 82 ± 26 MPa. This material/design is currently being used to construct spherical shell samples for drop tower and ballistic tests.
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Edited by: Ridha Hambli, Polytechnique Orleans, France
Reviewed by: Henrique De Amorim Almeida, Polytechnic Institute of Leiria, Portugal; Sigal Portnoy, Tel Aviv University, Israel
This article was submitted to Biomechanics, a section of the journal Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology.
ISSN:2296-4185
2296-4185
DOI:10.3389/fbioe.2013.00013