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Effects of some technological aspects on the fatigue strength of a cementless hip stem

✍ Scribed by Viceconti, Marco ;Toni, Aldo ;Giunti, Armando


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
734 KB
Volume
29
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9304

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Four prototype cementless hip stems were tested following the ISO 7206 protocol for the assessment of the endurance properties and compared with a cast Crο£ΏCoο£ΏMo (ASTM F75) commercially available stem which was used as reference design. All the tested stems were similar in shape and size, but with some substantial differences. The first was made of forged Ti6Al4V alloy (ASTM F136). The second, made of the same material, featured a central hole intended to reduce the bending stiffness of the stem itself. The third was identical to the second but for a small tooling notch in one of the fillets of the hole. The fourth was similar to the first but had a coating of sintered titanium beads in the proximal part. All of these modifications were made to evaluate the effect of fatigue strength of intentional or unintentional features commonly found in commercial stems. The forged Ti6Al4V alloy was found to be substantially stronger than the cast ASTM F75 Crο£ΏCoο£ΏMo alloy. However, tooling notches or sintered coatings were found to dramatically reduce this strength. Thus, the Ti6Al4V alloy calls for an accurate design process, especially when complex shapes or sintered structures are required. Β© 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.


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