In industrial applications where contact behavior of materials is characterized, fretting-associated fatigue plays a vital role as a failure agitator. While considering connection, it encounters friction. Biomaterials like polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) are renowned for their low coefficient of friction and are utilized in sophisticated functions like the hip joint cup and other biomedical implants. In addition to the axial stresses, some degree of dynamic bending stress is also developed occasionally in those fretting contacts. This research investigated the fracture behavior of a polymer PTFE under bending fretting fatigue. Finite element analysis justified the experimental results. A mathematical model is proposed by developing an empirical equation for fracture characterization in polymers like PTFE. It was found that the bending stiffness exists below the loading point ratio (LPR) 3.0, near the collar section of the specimen. Along with fretting, the bending load forces the specimen to crack in a brittle-ductile mode near the sharp-edged collar where the maximum strain rate, as well as stress, builds up. For a loading point ratio of above 3, a fracture takes place near the fretting pads in a tensile-brittle mode. Strain proportionality factor, k was found as a life optimization parameter under conditional loading. The microscopic analysis revealed that the fracture striation initiates perpendicularly to the fretting load. The fretting fatigue damage characteristic of PTFE may have a new era for the biomedical application of polymer-based composite materials.
CITATION STYLE
Shah, Q. M. Z., Kowser, M. A., Chowdhury, M. A., Chani, M. T. S., Alamry, K. A., Hossain, N., & Rahman, M. M. (2022). Modeling Fracture Formation, Behavior and Mechanics of Polymeric Materials: A Biomedical Implant Perspective. Journal of Composites Science, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcs6010031
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