Bimodal buckling governs human fingers’ luxation

Author:

Fraldi Massimiliano12,Palumbo Stefania12,Cutolo Arsenio12ORCID,Carotenuto Angelo Rosario12,Bigoni Davide3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Structures for Engineering and Architecture, University of Napoli “Federico II”, Napoli 80125, Italia

2. Laboratory of Integrated Mechanics and Imaging for Testing and Simulation, University of Napoli “Federico II”, Napoli 80125, Italia

3. Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, Trento 38123, Italia

Abstract

Equilibrium bifurcation in natural systems can sometimes be explained as a route to stress shielding for preventing failure. Although compressive buckling has been known for a long time, its less-intuitive tensile counterpart was only recently discovered and yet never identified in living structures or organisms. Through the analysis of an unprecedented all-in-one paradigm of elastic instability, it is theoretically and experimentally shown that coexistence of two curvatures in human finger joints is the result of an optimal design by nature that exploits both compressive and tensile buckling for inducing luxation in case of traumas, so realizing a unique mechanism for protecting tissues and preventing more severe damage under extreme loads. Our findings might pave the way to conceive complex architectured and bio-inspired materials, as well as next generation artificial joint prostheses and robotic arms for bio-engineering and healthcare applications.

Funder

EC | European Research Council

Italian Ministry of University and Research

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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