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Materials for Biomedical Engineering. Mohamed N. RahamanЧитать онлайн книгу.

Materials for Biomedical Engineering - Mohamed N. Rahaman


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      The majority of metals are not used in their pure state because they often have inadequate properties for most applications. Instead, other metals are commonly added to them in various amounts, forming alloys with an improved combination of properties such as higher strength, fatigue resistance, and corrosion resistance. Atoms of the alloying metal occupy sites in the host metal structure, forming substitutional or interstitial defects. The alloying metal is said to form a solid solution with the host metal. When examined at a scale larger than the atomic scale, a solid solution is homogeneous. It can be visualized as a solid‐state analog of a liquid solution such as a solution formed by dissolving common salt (sodium chloride) in water. The amount of one metal that can be alloyed with another metal to form a solid solution can vary from less than a fraction of a percent by weight (abbreviated wt%) to nearly 100 wt%, depending on the combination of metals. Copper, for example, can dissolve more than 30 wt% zinc to form brass, forming a substitutional solid solution in which the zinc atoms occupy the regular atomic sites of copper. On the other hand, iron can dissolve no more than ~0.007 wt% carbon at room temperature to form an interstitial solid solution known as mild streel. Brass and mild steel, however, are not suitable for use as biomaterials on account of their low corrosion resistance in vivo.

      A Ti alloy that is widely used as implants in orthopedic and dental surgery is Ti6Al4V, composed of ~6 wt% aluminum and ~4 wt% vanadium (V), with the remainder (~90 wt%) being Ti (Chapter 6). Although Ti6Al4V has an elastic modulus comparable to Ti, its superior strength, fatigue resistance, and corrosion resistance make it well suited for applications such as implants for total joint replacement, fracture fixation plates and dental implants. Certain stainless steels and cobalt–chromium (Co–Cr) alloys also find considerable use in orthopedic surgery.

      Ceramic solid solutions are widely used in technological applications. One solid solution used in biomedical applications is YSZ, formed by adding ~3 mol% of yttria (Y2O3) to zirconia (ZrO2). In this solid solution, the yttrium (Y) atoms predominantly occupy the regular zirconium (Zr) sites in the host ZrO2 structure, resulting in the formation of substitutional defects. Vacant defect sites (vacancies) are also created in the process to compensate for the difference in valence between Y and Zr.

Schematic illustration of major substituting ions and approximated formula of hydroxyapatite-like constituent of bone.

      3.4.2 Line Defects: Dislocations

Schematic illustration of a dislocation in a crystal and the distortion of the interatomic bonds in its immediate vicinity.

      Dislocations can become more numerous when a metal is deformed under appropriate mechanical stresses such as those during rolling or extrusion, thereby enhancing the strain energy of the crystals. Practically, deformation of a metal to increase its strain energy followed by thermal treatment of the highly strained material is one of the common methods used to control the microstructure of a metal and, thus, its mechanical properties (Chapter 6).

      In comparison, dislocations are unimportant in the majority of ceramics at ordinary temperatures. A considerably higher amount of energy is required for the creation and migration of dislocations in ceramics due to their strong ionic or covalent bonding, and their composition composed of two or more dissimilar atoms. Consequently, the dislocation density (number of dislocations per unit volume) is low or negligible, and the role of dislocations can be neglected in the majority of ceramics, including those used as biomaterials such as aluminum oxide, hydroxyapatite, and β‐tricalcium phosphate.

      Types of Dislocations

Schematic illustration of part of a perfect crystal (a) and the arrangement of atoms near the two basic types of dislocations, edge dislocation (b) and screw dislocation (c).

      Slip or Plastic Deformation Resulting from Dislocation Motion


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