Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1428994 Materials Science and Engineering: C 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Porous titanium is an effective alternative to reduce stress shielding•NaCl can be used as space holder to promote porosity in Titanium•Elastic properties comparable to that exhibited by cortical bone was achieved•PM methods are feasible route to manufacture gradient porosity in implants

One of the most important concerns in long-term prostheses is bone resorption as a result of the stress shielding due to stiffness mismatch between bone and implant. The aim of this study was to obtain porous titanium with stiffness values similar to that exhibited by cortical bone. Porous samples of commercial pure titanium grade-4 were obtained by following both loose-sintering processing and space-holder technique with NaCl between 40 and 70% in volume fraction. Both mechanical properties and porosity morphology were assessed. Young's modulus was measured using uniaxial compression testing, as well as ultrasound methodology. Complete characterization and mechanical testing results allowed us to determine some important findings: (i) optimal parameters for both processing routes; (ii) better mechanical response was obtained by using space-holder technique; (iii) pore geometry of loose sintering samples becomes more regular with increasing sintering temperature; in the case of the space-holder technique that trend was observed for decreasing volume fraction; (iv) most reliable Young's modulus measurements were achieved by ultrasound technique.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
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