Isolated and modulated effects of topology and material type on the mechanical properties of additively manufactured porous biomaterials

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

R. Hedayati (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics, University Medical Centre Utrecht)

S. M. Ahmadi (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics, TU Delft - (OLD) MSE-5)

K. Lietaert (3D Systems – LayerWise NV)

B. Pouran ( University Medical Centre Utrecht, TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

Y. Li (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

H. Weinans ( University Medical Centre Utrecht, TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

C. D. Rans (TU Delft - Structural Integrity & Composites)

A. A. Zadpoor (TU Delft - Biomaterials & Tissue Biomechanics)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2017.12.029 Final published version
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Journal title
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
Volume number
79
Pages (from-to)
254-263
Downloads counter
190

Abstract

In this study, we tried to quantify the isolated and modulated effects of topological design and material type on the mechanical properties of AM porous biomaterials. Towards this aim, we assembled a large dataset comprising the mechanical properties of AM porous biomaterials with different topological designs (i.e. different unit cell types and relative densities) and material types. Porous structures were additively manufactured from Co-Cr using a selective laser melting (SLM) machine and tested under quasi-static compression. The normalized mechanical properties obtained from those structures were compared with mechanical properties available from our previous studies for porous structures made from Ti-6Al-4V and pure titanium as well as with analytical solutions. The normalized values of elastic modulus and yield stress were found to be relatively close to each other as well as in agreement with analytical solutions regardless of material type. However, the material type was found to systematically affect the mechanical properties of AM porous biomaterials in general and the post-elastic/post-yield range (plateau stress and energy absorption capacity) in particular. To put this in perspective, topological design could cause up to 10-fold difference in the mechanical properties of AM porous biomaterials while up to 2-fold difference was observed as a consequence of changing the material type.