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Tendon. Tendon. Outline: Function Structure Mechanical Properties Significance to movement. Function. Connect muscle to bone, but are not rigid Are quite stretchy Passive but important
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Tendon • Outline: • Function • Structure • Mechanical Properties • Significance to movement
Function • Connect muscle to bone, but are not rigid • Are quite stretchy • Passive but important • Not just rigid, passive structural links b/n muscle and bone, but also affect movement through the overall function of the muscle-tendon-unit. • Function: • transmit muscle force and slide during movement • Store elastic energy Tendon properties affect force transmitted from muscle to bone
Structure • Primarily collagen : a structural protein • Collagen fibril -> fascicle->tendon • Bad blood supply -> slow to heal
Parallel bundles of collagen fibers • Resist stretching along long axis of tendon • Sufficiently flexible
Tendon • Outline: • Function • Structure • Mechanical Properties • Significance to movement
Mechanical Properties • Many experiments on isolated tendons • Show same mechanical property across different tendons
Force Linear region Toe region Displacement (Dx) Tendon or ligament • “J-shaped” • Stiffness (k) = slope • units = N/m • Stiffness: force required to stretch tendon/ligament by a unit distance • Force per change in length • Hooke’s Law • F=kx • F=elastic force • x=amount of stretch • k=stiffness
Tendons/ligaments are viscoelastic • Purely elastic materials • force-displacement relationship does NOT depend on velocity of stretch or time held at a length or load • Viscoelastic materials • force-displacement relationship DOES depend on: • Velocity of stretching • Time held at a given length or load Think of other materials that are viscoelastic?
Tendons are viscoelastic • Nonlinear response • Hysteresis • Velocity dependent loading • Creep • Load relaxation
Force Linear region Toe region Displacement (Dx) Viscoelasticity trait #1: Nonlinear Response • “J-shaped” • Stiffness (k) = slope • units = N/m • Stiffness: force required to stretch tendon/ligament by a unit distance • Force per change in length • Hooke’s Law • F=kx • F=elastic force • x=amount of stretch • k=stiffness
Force Stretch Recoil Displacement (x) Viscoelasticity trait #2: Hysteresis (Stretch & recoil: ) • Hysteresis: Force vs. displacement different for stretch & recoil
Viscoelasticity trait #3: velocity dependent stiffness Fast stretch Slow stretch Force At faster stretching velocities: 1. More force needed to rupture tendon Displacement From Wainwright et al. (1976). “Mechanical design in organisms”.
Displacement Time Viscoelasticity trait #4: Creep • Stretched with a constant force & displacement measured • Length increases with time
Viscoelasticity trait #5: Load relaxation • Specimen held at a constant length & force measured Force Time 2-10 min ( N & F, Fig 3-10)
Elastic energy • Stretch: mechanical work done on tendon/ligament equals elastic energy storage • Area under force - displacement curve Force Displacement Elastic energy stored during stretch
Viscoelasticity trait #3: velocity dependent stiffness Fast stretch Slow stretch Force At faster stretching velocities: 1. More force needed to rupture tendon 2. More energy is stored Displacement From Wainwright et al. (1976). “Mechanical design in organisms”.
Elastic energy • Stretch: mechanical work done on tendon/ligament equals elastic energy storage • Area under force - displacement curve • Recoil: material returns some (most) of energy stored elastically during stretch
Force Displacement Elastic energy returned during recoil Mechanical energy stored & returned by tendon/ligament Force Displacement Elastic energy stored during stretch
Force Displacement Larger hysteresis loop -greater energy loss• Hysteresis: indicates“viscoelasticity” For normal stretches, 90-95% of the elastic energy stored in tendons & ligaments is returned Energy lost
Elastic energy • Stretch: mechanical work done on tendon/ligament equals elastic energy storage • Area under force - displacement curve (x,F) Area = ½ Fx ½ kx ½ kx2 A & B A & C Force Displacement Elastic energy stored during stretch
Achilles elastic energy storage during stance phase of run Example of important equations: Uelastic = 0.5 k (DL)2 F = kDL Known: kAchilles= 260 kN/m F = 4700 N Uelastic = ? A)2.34 B)42120 C) 42 D)0.042 E) None of the above FAchilles Fg
Strain • Can measure length change in terms of mm • But more useful as % of original length, so can compare tendons of different lengths • Strain (e) = L-Lo/Lo • L: current length • Lo:original length • ‘stretchiness’
Stress • Because tendons have different thickness, want to normalize force as well • Thicker tendons need more force and vice versa • So normalize by area • Stress (s)=Force/Area
Stress/Strain (s/e) • By normalizing stress and strain, can now compare properties of materials of different sizes and shapes, regardless of absolute shape • Measure intrinsic tendon properties
Stress/Strain Relation for Tendon/Ligament Plastic region Stress s(MN/m2) syield sfailure 100 Elastic region Failure (rupture) Toe region Injury E s e 8% Strain e
Stress (MN/m2) 70 Stretch 35 Recoil 0 5 2.5 0 Strain (%) Stress vs. Strain for tendon/ligament • Similar for all mammalian tendons & ligaments • Elastic modulus: slope • E=stress/strain, =s/e • units of Pascals (N/m2), same as stress • kPa, Mpa, GPa
Compare the stiffness of a rubber band and a block of soft wood A) rubber band is more stiff B) rubber band is less stiff C) stiffness is similar D) Not enough information
Can compare different materials easily Tendon E = 1 GPa Soft wood (pine) E = 0.6 GPa Passive muscle E = 10kPa Rubber E = 20kPa Bone E= 20 GPa Walnut E= 15 Gpa Diamond E= 1000 Gpa JelloE = 1Pa
Stress vs. strain: material not geometry Two important definitions: Stress = F / A F = force; A = cross-sect. area Units = N / m2 = Pa Strain (%) = (displacement / rest length) • 100 = (DL / L) • 100
Stiffness vs. Elastic Modulus • Elastic Modulus (a.k.a. “Young’s Modulus”) • Slope of stress-strain relationship • a material property • Stiffness • Slope of force-displacement relationship • depends on : • material (modulus) & geometry • Structural property
Stress/Strain vs Force/Length • Material property vs. structural property • Stress/Strain ind of geometry • Force/Length (stiffness) depends on geometry.
Geometry effects • Stress = Elastic modulus • Strain • F / A = E • ∆L / L • Force = Stiffness • displacement • F = k∆L • Combine (1) & (2) to find: k = EA/L • E: similar in all tendons/ligaments A or L causesk
Extending the stress-strain relationship to injurious loads for tendon/ligament Plastic region Stress (MN/m2) 100 Elastic region Failure (rupture) Injury 8% Strain
Stress/Strain vs Force/Length • Material property vs. structural property • Stress/Strain ind of geometry • Force/Length (stiffness) depends on geometry.
Tendon strain • Achilles tendon during running: ~ 6% • close to strain where injury occurs (~ 8%) • Wrist extensor due to muscle force (P0): ~ 2%
Tendon • Outline: • Function • Structure • Mechanical Properties • Significance to movement
We need tendons with different stiffnesses for different functions.How is this accomplished? Possibilities: • different material properties • different geometry (architecture)
High force vs. versus fine control • Muscles in arm/hand demand fine control • precision more important than energy Slinky vs. rope
Ankle extensor tendon vs. wrist extensor tendon Achilles • Wrist extensor • k = 15 kN/m • F (muscle) = 60 N • DL = F / k = 0.004 m • Achilles tendon • k = 260 kN/m • F (muscle) = 4.7 kN • DL = F / k = 0.018 m Force Wrist ext. Displacement
Basis for tendon stiffness variation? • different material properties? • different geometry (architecture)?
Achilles tendon vs. wrist extensor tendon • Achilles tendon vs. wrist ext. tendon • k: 17 times greater • Geometric differences? • A: 30 times greater • L: 1.75 times longer k = EA/L E ~ 1.5 GN / m2
Useful tendon equations F = k L Elastic Energy = 0.5 k (L)2 Elastic Energy = 1/2 F L k = A/L elastic modulus = stress/strain ~ 1.5 x 109 N/m2 for tendon stress = F/A strain = L/L 10,000 cm2 = 1 m2
Human Tendons Compared E = 1.5 x 109 N/m2 for both tendons wrist Achilles L = 0.17 m L = 0.29m A = 1.67 x 10-6 m2 A = 0.00005 m2 k = EA/L = 15 kN/mk = EA/L = 260 kN/m elongation for 60N load? elongation for 4,700N load? L = F/k = 0.004m F/k = 0.018m Strain? = L/L = 0.004 / 0.17 = 2.4% = 0.018 / 0.29 = 6.2%
Problem Solving Approach • Write down what is given • Write down what you need to find • Write down the equations you will use • Show work! • Step by step
Practice Problem Design a wrist extensor tendon that when loaded with 60N of force will undergo the same %strain (6.2%) as the Achilles tendon. (Given L, determine A) L=0.17 m
Practice Problem If the wrist extensor tendon in the example had a cross sectional area = to the Achilles tendon example, what would be the absolute length change with a load of 60 N? Given: Aachilles= 0.00005 m2; Lwrist= 0.17m