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Acoustic emission applied to stochastic modeling of microdamage in compact bone.

Exploring the stochastic intricacies of bone microstructure is a promising way to make progress on the practical issue of bone fracture. This study investigates the fracture of human complete ribs subjected to bending and using acoustic emission (AE) for microfailure detection. As the strain increases, the number of AE signals per unit of time rises until, beyond a certain threshold, an avalanche of signals occurs, indicating the aggregation of numerous microfailures into a macroscopic fracture. Since microfailures appear randomly throughout the bending test, and given the lack of a deterministic law and the random nature of microfailures during the bending test, we opted to develop a stochastic model to account for their occurrence within the irregular and random microstructure of the cortical bone. Notable discoveries encompass the significant correlation between adjusted parameters of the stochastic model and the total number of microfailures with anthropometric variables such as age and body mass index (BMI). The progression of microfailures with strain is significantly more pronounced with age and BMI, as measured by the rate of bone deterioration. In addition, the rate of microfailures is significantly impacted by BMI alone. It is also observed that the average energy of the identified AE events adheres to a precisely defined Pareto distribution for every specimen, with the principal exponent exhibiting a significant correlation with anthropometric variables. From a mathematical standpoint, the model can be described as a double Cox stochastic and explosive (coxplosive process) model. This further provides insight into the reason why the ribs of older individuals are considerably less resilient than those of younger individuals, breaking under a considerably lower maximum strain ( ε max ).

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