Hi all.
I'm working on a set of real-world physics numbers for my own use and for anyone else who would see fit to use them, possibly even for submission to Toady.
But I'm not in the science department. I'm in the history department. Yes, Martha, I'm
not the history department, I'm
in the history department. And I need someone in the
math biology department.
(10 points to anyone who gets that reference...
)
But actually, sort of the crossroads of material science/physics and biology departments.
So, being something of a SIMP, I'm going to need help. Can you people literate in the appropriate areas give me a bit of advice?
First problem:
I want to come up with real-world Yield, Fracture and Strain at Yield values for bone, skin, and other keratinous, collagenous and bone-based biomaterials. Unfortunately, the viscoelastics are nowhere near as straightforward to read as inorganics. And if I use the "yield" value most papers give, it'll distort the results such that organics are brittle.
So, the question is, how do you read an appropriate, relevant Yield value from the stress/strain diagram of a viscoelastic material?Note that, since in DF we're talking about axe surgery and not plastic surgery, we're really not concerned about the lower yield-to-viscoelastic deformation "yield" that most of the literature talks about, but rather to the yield-to-beginning-of-failure that is more like inorganic yield (i.e., where the material is strained past the point of its ability to elastically deform, therefore straining plastically and damaging it).
But the stress/strain diagrams and the literature really don't give clear guidance on this. At all. So, as a matter of the question applied to concrete example, what Yield values should be estimated from visually reading the stress/strain diagram below?
Eyeballing it, here's what I got, but I'm really not very confident at all with my understanding of what we should treat as the Yield point for collagenous/viscoelastic stuff:
Tendon: 16.5 MPa or so (from where I see the 'crook' in the curve before it goes linear up until failure)
Rhinoceros Skin: about 25 MPa? (from about where the direction of the curve changes from concave to convex)
Cat Skin: about 8 MPa
Am I totally off on these?
This is a sort of repost of the question from the modding forum. And as I said there, I will be obscenely grateful for your help. And as I clarified there, I mean grateful to an obscene
degree, not in an obscene way. (!)