TY - GEN
T1 - COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN OF ADDITIVELY MANUFACTURED CURVILINEAR SCAFFOLDS FOR BONE REPAIR
AU - Cohen, David O.
AU - Aboutaleb, Sohaila M.G.
AU - Johnson, Amy Wagoner
AU - Norato, Julian A.
N1 - Support from the National Science Foundation, award CMMI-1727591 to conduct this work is gratefully acknowledged. We would also like to thank Prof. Mariana Kersh at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for useful discussions on this subject.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - This work introduces a computational method for designing ceramic scaffolds fabricated via direct ink writing (DIW) for maximum bone growth, whereby the deposited rods are curvilinear. A mechanobiological model of bone adaptation is used to compute bone growth into the scaffold, taking into account the shape of the defect, the applied loading, and the density distribution of bone in which the scaffold is implanted. The method ensures smooth, continuously varying rod contours are produced which are ideal for the DIW process. The method uses level sets of radial basis functions to fully define the scaffold geometry with a small number of design variables, minimizing the optimization’s computational cost. Effective elastic and diffusive properties of the scaffold as a function of the scaffold design and the bone density are obtained from previously constructed surrogates. These property surrogates are in turn used to perform bone adaptation simulations of the scaffold-bone system. Design sensitivities of the bone ingrowth within the scaffold are efficiently obtained using a finite difference scheme implemented in parallel. A demonstration of the methodology on a scaffold implanted in a pig mandible is presented. The scaffold is optimized to maximize bone ingrowth with geometric constraints to conform to the manufacturing process.
AB - This work introduces a computational method for designing ceramic scaffolds fabricated via direct ink writing (DIW) for maximum bone growth, whereby the deposited rods are curvilinear. A mechanobiological model of bone adaptation is used to compute bone growth into the scaffold, taking into account the shape of the defect, the applied loading, and the density distribution of bone in which the scaffold is implanted. The method ensures smooth, continuously varying rod contours are produced which are ideal for the DIW process. The method uses level sets of radial basis functions to fully define the scaffold geometry with a small number of design variables, minimizing the optimization’s computational cost. Effective elastic and diffusive properties of the scaffold as a function of the scaffold design and the bone density are obtained from previously constructed surrogates. These property surrogates are in turn used to perform bone adaptation simulations of the scaffold-bone system. Design sensitivities of the bone ingrowth within the scaffold are efficiently obtained using a finite difference scheme implemented in parallel. A demonstration of the methodology on a scaffold implanted in a pig mandible is presented. The scaffold is optimized to maximize bone ingrowth with geometric constraints to conform to the manufacturing process.
KW - bone growth
KW - bone scaffold
KW - curvilinear
KW - design
KW - direct ink writing
KW - optimization
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U2 - 10.1115/DETC2022-90582
DO - 10.1115/DETC2022-90582
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85142489283
T3 - Proceedings of the ASME Design Engineering Technical Conference
BT - 48th Design Automation Conference (DAC)
PB - American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
T2 - ASME 2022 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference, IDETC-CIE 2022
Y2 - 14 August 2022 through 17 August 2022
ER -