Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning
This project evaluated the biomechanical properties of chicken tibia when subjected to four different conditions. The four conditions were wet, ethanol-soaked without rehydration, ethanol-soaked with rehydration and oven-dried condition. A total of 56 chicken tibiae were randomly assigned to four eq...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-162482023-03-04T19:23:46Z Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning Lim, Yi Ling. Chou Siaw Meng School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering This project evaluated the biomechanical properties of chicken tibia when subjected to four different conditions. The four conditions were wet, ethanol-soaked without rehydration, ethanol-soaked with rehydration and oven-dried condition. A total of 56 chicken tibiae were randomly assigned to four equal groups. Each group was treated in a different condition prior to the three-point bending test. Two methods for estimating the modulus of elasticity were examined using paired-difference test. The first method was to use the gradient of the initial linear portion of the force-displacement curve to determine the bone stiffness. The other method was to use the gradient at the point of inflection of the force-displacement curve. It was found that there was no significant statistical difference between the two methods at 95% level of significance. The results from this project showed that there were no significant difference in ultimate force, ultimate stress and modulus of elasticity among the wet, ethanol-soaked without rehydration and ethanol-soaked with rehydration condition. However, there was a significant change in mass of the bone for the ethanol-soaked condition (with and without rehydration) and oven-dried condition. Among the three conditions, the greatest mass change was observed in oven-dried condition followed by ethanol-soaked without rehydration and ethanol-soaked with rehydration. Significant differences in the ultimate force and ultimate stress were also observed in the oven-dried condition. The modulus of elasticity was also the highest among all the conditions although it was not statistically significant. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2009-05-22T08:22:10Z 2009-05-22T08:22:10Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/16248 en Nanyang Technological University 134 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Engineering::Bioengineering Lim, Yi Ling. Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
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This project evaluated the biomechanical properties of chicken tibia when subjected to four different conditions. The four conditions were wet, ethanol-soaked without rehydration, ethanol-soaked with rehydration and oven-dried condition. A total of 56 chicken tibiae were randomly assigned to four equal groups. Each group was treated in a different condition prior to the three-point bending test. Two methods for estimating the modulus of elasticity were examined using paired-difference test. The first method was to use the gradient of the initial linear portion of the force-displacement curve to determine the bone stiffness. The other method was to use the gradient at the point of inflection of the force-displacement curve. It was found that there was no significant statistical difference between the two methods at 95% level of significance. The results from this project showed that there were no significant difference in ultimate force, ultimate stress and modulus of elasticity among the wet, ethanol-soaked without rehydration and ethanol-soaked with rehydration condition. However, there was a significant change in mass of the bone for the ethanol-soaked condition (with and without rehydration) and oven-dried condition. Among the three conditions, the greatest mass change was observed in oven-dried condition followed by ethanol-soaked without rehydration and ethanol-soaked with rehydration. Significant differences in the ultimate force and ultimate stress were also observed in the oven-dried condition. The modulus of elasticity was also the highest among all the conditions although it was not statistically significant. |
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Chou Siaw Meng |
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Chou Siaw Meng Lim, Yi Ling. |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Lim, Yi Ling. |
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Lim, Yi Ling. |
title |
Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
title_short |
Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
title_full |
Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
title_fullStr |
Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
title_full_unstemmed |
Biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
title_sort |
biomechanical properties of chicken tibia before and after conditioning |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/16248 |
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1759855891790692352 |