Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10620755 | Acta Materialia | 2008 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Ti-Ni microtubes are attractive materials for biomedical devices, such as micro-catheters and micro-stents, but it is difficult to fabricate them with dimensions of less than 100 μm by conventional tube-drawing. In this study, Ti-Ni microtubes with 50 μm inner diameter and a tube wall thickness of 6 μm was successfully fabricated using a novel method in which Ti-Ni was sputter-deposited on a Cu wire with a diameter of 50 μm. All the microtubes exhibited shape memory behavior after crystallization at 873 K for 3.6 ks. Microtubes fabricated without rotating the Cu wire during deposition have low fracture strength due to the columnar grains and non-uniform tube wall thickness. Microtubes fabricated by depositing Ti-Ni on a rotating wire have a uniform wall thickness and the fracture strength increased with increasing rotation speed. Microtubes made by the rotating-wire method exhibited superelasticity of 3% strain at room temperature with high fracture stress of 950 MPa, suggesting that they are suitable for practical applications.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Pio John S. Buenconsejo, Kanau Ito, Hee Young Kim, Shuichi Miyazaki,