Kober, CorneliaMüller-Hannemann, Matthias2021-12-172021-12-1720002197-8085https://depositonce.tu-berlin.de/handle/11303/15955http://dx.doi.org/10.14279/depositonce-14728A combinatorial approach for the generation of hexahedral meshes by means of successive dual cycle elimination has been proposed by the second author in previous work. We provide a case study for the applicability of our hexahedral mesh generation approach to the simulation of physiological stress scenarios of the human mandible. Due to its complex and very detailed free-form geometry, the mandible model is very demanding. This test case is used as a running example to report on the progress and recent advances of the cycle elimination scheme. The given input data, a surface triangulation, requires a substantial mesh reduction and a suitable conversion into a quadrilateral surface mesh as a first step, for which we use mesh clustering and b-matching techniques. Several strategies for improved cycle elimination orders are proposed. They lead to a significant reduction in the mesh size and a better structural quality. Based on the resulting combinatorial meshes, gradient- based optimized smoothing with the condition number of the Jacobian matrix as objective together with mesh untangling techniques yielded embeddings of a satisfactory quality. We tested our hexahedral meshes for the mandible model in an FEM simulation under the scenario of a bite on a “hard nut.” Our simulation results are in good agreement with observations from biomechanical experiments.en510 Mathematikhexahedral mesh generationquadrilateral mesh generationoptimized mesh smoothingFEM simulationhuman mandibleHexahedral Mesh Generation for the Simulation of the Human MandibleResearch Paper