| Literature DB >> 31940906 |
Toshiyuki Tateiwa1, Elia Marin2,3, Alfredo Rondinella4, Marco Ciniglio2, Wenliang Zhu2, Saverio Affatato5, Giuseppe Pezzotti1,2,6,7, Ryan M Bock8, Bryan J McEntire8, B Sonny Bal8, Kengo Yamamoto1.
Abstract
Zirconia-toughened alumina (ZTA) currently represents the bioceramic gold standard for load-bearing components in artificial hip joints. ZTA is long known for its high flexural strength and fracture toughness, both properties arising from a microscopic crack-tip shielding mechanism due to the stress-induced tetragonal-to-monoclinic (t→m) polymorphic transformation of zirconia. However, there have been concerns over the years regarding the long-term structural performance of ZTA since the t→m transformation also spontaneously occurs at the material's surface under low-temperature environmental conditions with a concomitant degradation of mechanical properties. Spontaneous surface degradation has been extensively studied in vitro, but predictive algorithms have underestimated the extent of in vivo degradation observed in retrievals. The present research focused on burst-strength assessments of Ø28 mm ZTA femoral before and after long-term in vitro hydrothermal ageing according to ISO 7206-10. An average burst strength of 52 kN was measured for pristine femoral heads. This value was ~36% lower than results obtained under the same standard conditions by other authors. A further loss of burst strength (~13% in ultimate load) was observed after hydrothermal ageing, with increased surface monoclinic content ranging from ~6% to >50%. Nevertheless, the repetitively stressed and hydrothermally treated ZTA heads exceeded the minimum burst strength stipulated by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) despite severe test conditions. Lastly, Raman spectroscopic assessments of phase transformation and residual stresses on the fracture surface of the femoral heads were used to clarify burst-strength fluctuations and the effect of hydrothermal ageing on the material's overall strength degradation.Entities:
Keywords: BIOLOX®delta; Raman microprobe spectroscopy; burst strength; femoral head
Year: 2020 PMID: 31940906 PMCID: PMC7013702 DOI: 10.3390/ma13020350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Schematic representation of the burst-strength testing equipment, following the international standard ISO 7206-10.
Figure 2Burst-strength results obtained on the different series of samples.
Figure 3Reconstruction of two representative burst-strength-tested femoral heads tested against CoCr trunnions, for each of the respective testing conditions. The top of each femoral head has been marked with a dot.
Figure 4Main fragments of a burst-strength-tested ceramic femoral head, demonstrating primary and secondary fracture surfaces. A, B, and C mark a fragment with metallic stains, the top surface of the bore and some oriented marks, respectively.
Figure 5Scanning Electron Microscope images of two areas of the main fracture surface: (a) mirror-like and (b) intergranular.
Figure 6Monoclinic volume fractions as measured by Raman microprobe on the external surface (red bars) and on the fracture surface (blue bars) of the samples tested at different conditions.
Figure 7Radius of the mirror region and residual stresses as a function of the ageing conditions, for CoCr trunnions (red circles for , black squares for Ravg).
Figure 8Monoclinic volume fraction (MVF) as measured by Raman spectroscopy using the Katagiri equation, as a function of portion on the primary fracture surface for a (a) Group 2 and a (b) pristine femoral head tested against CoCr trunnions.
Figure 9Raman band shifts for monoclinic zirconia, tetragonal zirconia and alumina and equivalent stress on Group 2 (top row) and pristine (bottom row) femoral head.
Figure 10In-depth profile of monoclinic volume fraction as a function of hydrothermal ageing, as measured by Raman spectroscopy using the Karagiri equation.