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The Response of Cranial Biomechanical Finite Element Models to Variations in Mesh Density
Authors:Jen A. Bright  Emily J. Rayfield
Affiliation:1. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Queens Road, Bristol, United KingdomFax: 0117‐925‐3385;2. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Queens Road, Bristol, United Kingdom
Abstract:Finite element (FE) models provide discrete solutions to continuous problems. Therefore, to arrive at the correct solution, it is vital to ensure that FE models contain a sufficient number of elements to fully resolve all the detail encountered in a continuum structure. Mesh convergence testing is the process of comparing successively finer meshes to identify the point of diminishing returns; where increasing resolution has marginal effects on results and further detail would become costly and unnecessary. Historically, convergence has not been considered in most CT‐based biomechanical reconstructions involving complex geometries like the skull, as generating such models has been prohibitively time‐consuming. To assess how mesh convergence influences results, 18 increasingly refined CT‐based models of a domestic pig skull were compared to identify the point of convergence for strain and displacement, using both linear and quadratic tetrahedral elements. Not all regions of the skull converged at the same rate, and unexpectedly, areas of high strain converged faster than low‐strain regions. Linear models were slightly stiffer than their quadratic counterparts, but did not converge less rapidly. As expected, insufficiently dense models underestimated strain and displacement, and failed to resolve strain “hot‐spots” notable in contour plots. In addition to quantitative differences, visual assessments of such plots often inform conclusions drawn in many comparative studies, highlighting that mesh convergence should be performed on all finite element models before further analysis takes place. Anat Rec, 2011. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:finite element analysis  convergence  skull  biomechanics  feeding
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