Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations

Debris created during the wear of prosthetic joints is known to have an effect on the success of the implant. As such the factors affecting wear and lubrication need to be understood in order to reduce wear as much as possible in vivo. In this thesis a number of orthopaedic biomaterials were tested...

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Main Author: Vassiliou, Katelia
Published: Durham University 2005
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.550128
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5501282017-03-16T15:51:22ZTribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinationsVassiliou, Katelia2005Debris created during the wear of prosthetic joints is known to have an effect on the success of the implant. As such the factors affecting wear and lubrication need to be understood in order to reduce wear as much as possible in vivo. In this thesis a number of orthopaedic biomaterials were tested in vitro, and various factors affecting their tribology were investigated. Load was found to affect wear for stainless steel on UHMWPE contacts, but not the wear factor which has a load term incorporated into it. Increasing nominal contact stress, however, was found to cause a decrease in wear factor particularly at low values of contact stress. The wear factor was less affected at higher values of contact stress. Clearance and roughness were both seen to affect the lubrication mode under which ceramic-on-ceramic joints operated, as noted by extensive friction testing. Lower clearances and lower roughnesses respectively promoted fluid film lubrication. The wear remained very low in both cases and was undetectable gravimetrically. However, changes in the surface morphology throughout testing supported the fact that some wear did occur, but that this was so small as to be beyond the detection limits of the experiment. This is encouraging for the longevity of these joints in vivo. The "running-in" phenomenon seen in metal-on-metal combinations was investigated using large diameter metal-on-metal resurfacing prostheses. During the course of wear testing the initially higher wear rate dropped to a much lower steady state wear. Friction testing indicated that the joints were operating closer to fluid film lubrication and the topography of the joint surfaces became more negatively skewed as the test progressed.617.956Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.550128http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/2773/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 617.956
spellingShingle 617.956
Vassiliou, Katelia
Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
description Debris created during the wear of prosthetic joints is known to have an effect on the success of the implant. As such the factors affecting wear and lubrication need to be understood in order to reduce wear as much as possible in vivo. In this thesis a number of orthopaedic biomaterials were tested in vitro, and various factors affecting their tribology were investigated. Load was found to affect wear for stainless steel on UHMWPE contacts, but not the wear factor which has a load term incorporated into it. Increasing nominal contact stress, however, was found to cause a decrease in wear factor particularly at low values of contact stress. The wear factor was less affected at higher values of contact stress. Clearance and roughness were both seen to affect the lubrication mode under which ceramic-on-ceramic joints operated, as noted by extensive friction testing. Lower clearances and lower roughnesses respectively promoted fluid film lubrication. The wear remained very low in both cases and was undetectable gravimetrically. However, changes in the surface morphology throughout testing supported the fact that some wear did occur, but that this was so small as to be beyond the detection limits of the experiment. This is encouraging for the longevity of these joints in vivo. The "running-in" phenomenon seen in metal-on-metal combinations was investigated using large diameter metal-on-metal resurfacing prostheses. During the course of wear testing the initially higher wear rate dropped to a much lower steady state wear. Friction testing indicated that the joints were operating closer to fluid film lubrication and the topography of the joint surfaces became more negatively skewed as the test progressed.
author Vassiliou, Katelia
author_facet Vassiliou, Katelia
author_sort Vassiliou, Katelia
title Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
title_short Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
title_full Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
title_fullStr Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
title_full_unstemmed Tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
title_sort tribological studies of modern orthopaedic biomaterial combinations
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2005
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.550128
work_keys_str_mv AT vassilioukatelia tribologicalstudiesofmodernorthopaedicbiomaterialcombinations
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