An experimental investigation upon the durability of the artificial knee joints with PVA hydrogel articular cartilage is presented. PVA hydrogel is manufactured by the cyclic freezing/thawing and annealing methods; femoral component is a disc made in stainless steel. This work is original in the meaning that: a weighting method to differentiate the worn mass from the mass of exuded water for PVA hydrogel is suggested; an original wear test rig, which simulates the anterior-posterior displacement of the knee motion during walking is proposed; wear factor variation against the number of walking cycles (durability curve) for PVA hydrogel is reported. The lowest wear factor obtained is on order of 10-6 - 10-6 mm3/Nm. PVA hydrogel with reduced water content (45 - 50%) produces the smallest wear factor, for the same polymerization degree. Reduction of the wear factor is on order of 104 when the PVA polymerization degree increases from 1 800 to 12 300. PVA hydrogel manufactured on a hydrophobic substrate (PTFE) presents a 16 - 27% lower wear factor than that prepared on a hydrophilic substrate (glass). When layer thickness increases from 2 to 3.6 mm, the wear factor reduction is 18%. Influence of the standing interval in start-up conditions on the wear factor is also investigated.
CITATION STYLE
Suciu, A. N., Iwatsubo, T., Matsuda, M., & Nishino, T. (2004). A study upon durability of the artificial knee joint with PVA hydrogel cartilage. JSME International Journal, Series C: Mechanical Systems, Machine Elements and Manufacturing, 47(1), 199–208. https://doi.org/10.1299/jsmec.47.199
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