Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- About the cover
- Preface
- 1 Vector calculus
- 2 The concepts of force and moment
- 3 Static equilibrium
- 4 The mechanical behaviour of fibres
- 5 Fibres: time-dependent behaviour
- 6 Analysis of a one-dimensional continuous elastic medium
- 7 Biological materials and continuum mechanics
- 8 Stress in three-dimensional continuous media
- 9 Motion: the time as an extra dimension
- 10 Deformation and rotation, deformation rate and spin
- 11 Local balance of mass, momentum and energy
- 12 Constitutive modelling of solids and fluids
- 13 Solution strategies for solid and fluid mechanics problems
- 14 Solution of the one-dimensional diffusion equation by means of the Finite Element Method
- 15 Solution of the one-dimensional convection-diffusion equation by means of the Finite Element Method
- 16 Solution of the three-dimensional convection-diffusion equation by means of the Finite Element Method
- 17 Shape functions and numerical integration
- 18 Infinitesimal strain elasticity problems
- References
- Index
7 - Biological materials and continuum mechanics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- About the cover
- Preface
- 1 Vector calculus
- 2 The concepts of force and moment
- 3 Static equilibrium
- 4 The mechanical behaviour of fibres
- 5 Fibres: time-dependent behaviour
- 6 Analysis of a one-dimensional continuous elastic medium
- 7 Biological materials and continuum mechanics
- 8 Stress in three-dimensional continuous media
- 9 Motion: the time as an extra dimension
- 10 Deformation and rotation, deformation rate and spin
- 11 Local balance of mass, momentum and energy
- 12 Constitutive modelling of solids and fluids
- 13 Solution strategies for solid and fluid mechanics problems
- 14 Solution of the one-dimensional diffusion equation by means of the Finite Element Method
- 15 Solution of the one-dimensional convection-diffusion equation by means of the Finite Element Method
- 16 Solution of the three-dimensional convection-diffusion equation by means of the Finite Element Method
- 17 Shape functions and numerical integration
- 18 Infinitesimal strain elasticity problems
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Up to this point all treated problems were in a certain way one-dimensional. Indeed, in Chapter 3 we have discussed equilibrium of two- and three-dimensional bodies and in Chapters 4 the fibres were allowed to have some arbitrary orientation in three-dimensional space. But, when deformations were involved, the focus was on fibres and bars, dealing with one-dimensional force/strain relationships. Only one-dimensional equations have been solved. In the following chapters, the theory will be extended to the description of three-dimensional bodies and it is opportune to spend some time looking at the concept of a continuum.
Consider a certain amount of solid and/or fluid material in a three-dimensional space. Although in reality for neighbouring points in space the (physical) character and behaviour of the residing material may be completely different (because of discontinuities at the microscopic level, becoming clearer by reducing the scale of observation) it is common practice that a less detailed description (at a macroscopic level) with a more gradual change of physical properties is used. The discontinuous heterogeneous reality is homogenized and modelled as a continuum. To make this clearer, consider the bone in Fig. 7.1. Although one might conceive the bone at a macroscopic level, as depicted in Fig. 7.1(a), as a massive structure filling all the volume that it occupies in space, it is clear from that at a smaller scale the bone is a discrete structure with open spaces in between (although the spaces can be filled with a softer material or a liquid).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- BiomechanicsConcepts and Computation, pp. 114 - 131Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009