Options
Fracture mechanics properties of human cranial bone
Date Issued
2025-03
Date Available
2025-06-26T12:05:03Z
Embargo end date
2025-06-04
Abstract
The mechanical properties of the human skull have been examined and established previously in the literature, for example, the transversal isotropy of cranial bone and properties including the Elastic modulus and Poisson's ratio. However, despite the existing data, there are still mechanical properties which remain to be determined for the human skull. The present study aims to characterise the fracture properties of human cranial bone within the Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics (LEFM) framework. Unembalmed human (2 female and 3 male) cortical cranial bone samples were harvested from the frontal, and left and right parietal bones and were tested in Mode I (N = 124), Mode II (N = 31) and Mixed-Mode I-II (N = 47) loading conditions. For Mode I, samples were tested using Single Edge Notched Beams (SENB) under symmetric 3-point bending, while for Mixed-Mode I-II samples were tested under asymmetric 3-point bending. For Mode II, 4-point bend tests were carried out. All samples fractured in a brittle fashion. From these tests, reference values of stress intensity factor (KI and KII) and the strain energy release rate (JI, GI, GII, GI-II) for the frontal, left and right parietal bones were calculated. It was determined that the fracture toughness of the frontal, and left and right parietal bones are not statistically different from each other and that they exhibit symmetry about the sagittal plane. It was also demonstrated that, as is the case for other human bones and for the age range tested here, the fracture toughness of human cranial bone is lower for females (KI female 2.48 (±2.16) MPa∗m0.5, KI male 4.75 (±2.58) MPa∗m0.5, GI female 1.07 (±3.01) kJ/m2, GI male 1.85 (±1.93) kJ/m2, JI female 1.57 (1.89) kJ/m2 and JI male 4.03 (±3.32) kJ/m2) and varies with age. More experimental work should be carried out to confirm the extrapolation of these conclusions to the other fracture modes tested here. Although these results are influenced by the age range and the age gap within the group of donors, the primary data presented here is valuable to those wishing to predict crack evolution and propagation in the human cranial bone and may prove useful in developing failure criterion or simulations of skull fracture using Finite Element Analysis.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Elsevier
Journal
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
Volume
163
Copyright (Published Version)
2025 Elsevier
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1751-6161
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
Fracture Mechanics Properties of Human Cranial Bone.pdf
Size
2.83 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
bfa2f27c82f37ce58a8b401518ba8f46
Owning collection