Abstract
Biocompatible β Ti–45Nb (wt%) alloys were subjected to different methods of severe plastic deformation (SPD) in order to increase the mechanical strength without increasing the low Young׳s modulus thus avoiding the stress shielding effect. The mechanical properties, microstructural changes and texture evolution were investigated, by means of tensile, microhardness and nanoindentation tests, as well as TEM and XRD. Significant increases of hardness and ultimate tensile strength up to a factor 1.6 and 2, respectively, could be achieved depending on the SPD method applied (hydrostatic extrusion – HE, high pressure torsion – HPT, and rolling and folding – R&F), while maintaining the considerable ductility. Due to the high content of β-stabilizing Nb, the initial lattice structure turned out to be stable upon all of the SPD methods applied. This explains why with all SPD methods the apparent Young׳s modulus measured by nanoindentation did not exceed that of the non-processed material. For its variations below that level, they could be quantitatively related to changes in the SPD-induced texture, by means of calculations of the Young׳s modulus on basis of the texture data which were carefully measured for all different SPD techniques and strains. This is especially true for the significant decrease of Young׳s modulus for increasing R&F processing which is thus identified as a texture effect. Considering the mechanical biocompatibility (percentage of hardness over Young׳s modulus), a value of 3–4% is achieved with all the SPD routes applied which recommends them for enhancing β Ti-alloys for biomedical applications.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 93-105 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials |
| Volume | 62 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Sept 2016 |
Funding
The authors would like to thank Dr. F. Spieckermann, Prof. E. Schaffer for technical support, A. Berger for ion milling of the TEM specimens and M. Kulczyk for hydrostatic extrusion experiments. This research work was financially supported by the EU-Initial Training Network, BioTiNet within the framework of FP7/2007-13 under grant agreement No. 264635.
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
- 103018 Materials physics
Keywords
- beta-titanium alloy
- Severe plastic deformation
- Mechanical properties
- Texture evolution
- Young's modulus
- LOW YOUNGS MODULUS
- SHAPE-MEMORY BEHAVIOR
- HIGH-PRESSURE TORSION
- BETA TINBSN ALLOYS
- TI-NB ALLOYS
- TITANIUM-ALLOYS
- BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS
- OMEGA-PHASE
- ELASTIC PROPERTIES
- BINARY-ALLOYS
- Young׳s modulus
- β-titanium alloy
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