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Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between unit cell type and porosity and the fatigue behavior of selective laser melted meta-biomaterials

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TLDR
It was observed that, in addition to static mechanical properties, the fatigue properties of the porous biomaterials are highly dependent on the type of unit cell as well as on porosity.
Abstract
Meta-materials are structures when their small-scale properties are considered, but behave as materials when their homogenized macroscopic properties are studied. There is an intimate relationship between the design of the small-scale structure and the homogenized properties of such materials. In this article, we studied that relationship for meta-biomaterials that are aimed for biomedical applications, otherwise known as meta-biomaterials. Selective laser melted porous titanium (Ti6Al4V ELI) structures were manufactured based on three different types of repeating unit cells, namely cube, diamond, and truncated cuboctahedron, and with different porosities. The morphological features, static mechanical properties, and fatigue behavior of the porous biomaterials were studied with a focus on their fatigue behavior. It was observed that, in addition to static mechanical properties, the fatigue properties of the porous biomaterials are highly dependent on the type of unit cell as well as on porosity. None of the porous structures based on the cube unit cell failed after 106 loading cycles even when the applied stress reached 80% of their yield strengths. For both other unit cells, higher porosities resulted in shorter fatigue lives for the same level of applied stress. When normalized with respect to their yield stresses, the S-N data points of structures with different porosities very well (R2>0.8) conformed to one single power law specific to the type of the unit cell. For the same level of normalized applied stress, the truncated cuboctahedron unit cell resulted in a longer fatigue life as compared to the diamond unit cell. In a similar comparison, the fatigue lives of the porous structures based on both truncated cuboctahedron and diamond unit cells were longer than that of the porous structures based on the rhombic dodecahedron unit cell (determined in a previous study). The data presented in this study could serve as a basis for design of porous biomaterials as well as for corroboration of relevant analytical and computational models.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Laser and electron-beam powder-bed additive manufacturing of metallic implants: A review on processes, materials and designs.

TL;DR: In this review, the current progress of two AM processes suitable for metallic orthopaedic implant applications, namely selective laser melting (SLM) and electron beam melting (EBM) are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Defects on Mechanical Properties of Ti-6Al-4V Components Produced by Selective Laser Melting and Electron Beam Melting

TL;DR: In this article, the mechanical properties of Ti-6Al-4V samples produced by selective laser melting (SLM) and electron beam melting (EBM) were evaluated for hardness, tensile, and fatigue tests.
Journal ArticleDOI

SLM lattice structures: Properties, performance, applications and challenges

TL;DR: A comprehensive summary of the experimental data reported on the mechanical response of Selective Laser Melting (SLM) lattice structures can be found in this paper, where the design, fabrication and performance of SLM lattice structure are reviewed and the quality of data reported to inform best-practice for future studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Additively manufactured metallic porous biomaterials based on minimal surfaces: A unique combination of topological, mechanical, and mass transport properties

TL;DR: Rationally designed and additively manufactured porous metallic biomaterials based on four different types of triply periodic minimal surfaces that mimic the properties of bone to an unprecedented level of multi-physics detail exhibit an interesting combination of topological, mechanical, and mass transport properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Auxetic mechanical metamaterials

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the topology-property relationship in three main classes of auxetic metamaterials, namely re-entrant, chiral, and rotating (semi-) rigid structures.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Significance of Fatigue Crack Closure

TL;DR: Al alloy sheet fatigue crack closure under cyclic tensile loading, deriving expression for crack propagation rate in terms of effective stress amplitude as discussed by the authors, was derived for the first time in the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

Poisson's ratio and modern materials

TL;DR: On the bicentenary of the publication of Poisson's Traité de Mécanique, the continuing relevance of Poissons's ratio in the understanding of the mechanical characteristics of modern materials is reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrasonic metamaterials with negative modulus

TL;DR: A new class of ultrasonic metamaterials consisting of an array of subwavelength Helmholtz resonators with designed acoustic inductance and capacitance with an effective dynamic modulus with negative values near the resonance frequency is reported.
Book

Fatigue of structures and materials

Jaap Schijve
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce the concept of Fatigue as a Phenomenon in the material and present an overview of the properties of materials and their properties under variable-amplitude loading.
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