Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot

碩士 === 中原大學 === 醫學工程研究所 === 89 === The purpose of this study was to develop a three-dimensional finite element model of a normal left foot which comprising most joints of the foot. The validity of this model was verified by comparing analysis results with experimentally measured joint contact pressu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shueen-Hong Juang, 莊舜弘
Other Authors: Weng-Pin Chen
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2001
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/62227769999304787946
id ndltd-TW-089CYCU5530026
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-TW-089CYCU55300262016-07-06T04:10:19Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/62227769999304787946 Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot 正常足部之三維準靜態有限元素分析 Shueen-Hong Juang 莊舜弘 碩士 中原大學 醫學工程研究所 89 The purpose of this study was to develop a three-dimensional finite element model of a normal left foot which comprising most joints of the foot. The validity of this model was verified by comparing analysis results with experimentally measured joint contact pressures, plantar normal pressures and plantar shear stresses. The geometry of the left foot was acquired from a 24 year male without any foot pathology by computed tomography scan. The outer contours of the bone and soft tissue were determined by an automatic contouring program, and used to generate the solid models by a CAD program (SolidWorks 99). The 4-node tetrahedral models were created and analyzed using a CAE program (Mentat 2000 and MARC 2000). The material properties were assumed to be linear elastic. A quasi-static loading scheme was employed. All nodes on the upper cross-sectional area of the shank were constrained, and a rigid plane under the foot or footwear was moving towards the foot by using 12 displacement increment control from 0 to 12 mm at 1 mm interval. The reaction forces on the constrained nodes were recovered at each increment. The joint contact pressures obtained from the finite element analysis were found to be much lower than the experimentally measured results. This is due to the fact that the larger contact areas assumed in the finite element model. The plantar normal pressures and plantar shear stresses were compared with experimentally measured results from literature and similar trends and pressure ranges were found. When wearing flat insole or total contact insole, the plantar pressure at the heel region can be reduced 61.39% and 90.71%, respectively. The current study proposed a validated three-dimensional foot model which can be modified to simulate other foot conditions in the future. This foot model can be useful in observing stress distributions inside the foot, and in designing footwear, and the investigation of other biomechanical behavior of the foot subjected to different ambulatory movements. Weng-Pin Chen 陳文斌 2001 學位論文 ; thesis 111 zh-TW
collection NDLTD
language zh-TW
format Others
sources NDLTD
description 碩士 === 中原大學 === 醫學工程研究所 === 89 === The purpose of this study was to develop a three-dimensional finite element model of a normal left foot which comprising most joints of the foot. The validity of this model was verified by comparing analysis results with experimentally measured joint contact pressures, plantar normal pressures and plantar shear stresses. The geometry of the left foot was acquired from a 24 year male without any foot pathology by computed tomography scan. The outer contours of the bone and soft tissue were determined by an automatic contouring program, and used to generate the solid models by a CAD program (SolidWorks 99). The 4-node tetrahedral models were created and analyzed using a CAE program (Mentat 2000 and MARC 2000). The material properties were assumed to be linear elastic. A quasi-static loading scheme was employed. All nodes on the upper cross-sectional area of the shank were constrained, and a rigid plane under the foot or footwear was moving towards the foot by using 12 displacement increment control from 0 to 12 mm at 1 mm interval. The reaction forces on the constrained nodes were recovered at each increment. The joint contact pressures obtained from the finite element analysis were found to be much lower than the experimentally measured results. This is due to the fact that the larger contact areas assumed in the finite element model. The plantar normal pressures and plantar shear stresses were compared with experimentally measured results from literature and similar trends and pressure ranges were found. When wearing flat insole or total contact insole, the plantar pressure at the heel region can be reduced 61.39% and 90.71%, respectively. The current study proposed a validated three-dimensional foot model which can be modified to simulate other foot conditions in the future. This foot model can be useful in observing stress distributions inside the foot, and in designing footwear, and the investigation of other biomechanical behavior of the foot subjected to different ambulatory movements.
author2 Weng-Pin Chen
author_facet Weng-Pin Chen
Shueen-Hong Juang
莊舜弘
author Shueen-Hong Juang
莊舜弘
spellingShingle Shueen-Hong Juang
莊舜弘
Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot
author_sort Shueen-Hong Juang
title Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot
title_short Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot
title_full Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot
title_fullStr Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot
title_full_unstemmed Three-Dimensional Quasi-Static Finite Element Analysis of a Normal Foot
title_sort three-dimensional quasi-static finite element analysis of a normal foot
publishDate 2001
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/62227769999304787946
work_keys_str_mv AT shueenhongjuang threedimensionalquasistaticfiniteelementanalysisofanormalfoot
AT zhuāngshùnhóng threedimensionalquasistaticfiniteelementanalysisofanormalfoot
AT shueenhongjuang zhèngchángzúbùzhīsānwéizhǔnjìngtàiyǒuxiànyuánsùfēnxī
AT zhuāngshùnhóng zhèngchángzúbùzhīsānwéizhǔnjìngtàiyǒuxiànyuánsùfēnxī
_version_ 1718337659080802304