• Title of article

    Interfacial properties and microfailure degradation mechanisms of bioabsorbable fibers/poly-l-lactide composites using micromechanical test and nondestructive acoustic emission

  • Author/Authors

    Joung-Man Park، نويسنده , , Dae-Sik Kim، نويسنده , , Sung-Ryong Kim، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    17
  • From page
    403
  • To page
    419
  • Abstract
    Interfacial properties and microfailure degradation mechanisms of the bioabsorbable composites for implant materials were investigated using micromechanical technique and nondestructive acoustic emission (AE). The tensile strength of absorbable fibers with hydrolysis was analyzed statistically using either uni- or bimodal Weibull distribution. As hydrolysis time increased, the tensile strength, the modulus and the elongation of poly(ester-amide) (PEA) and bioactive glass fibers decreased, whereas those of chitosan fiber almost did not change. Interfacial shear strength (IFSS) between bioactive glass fiber and poly-l-lactide (PLLA) was much higher than PEA or chitosan fiber/PLLA systems using dual matrix composite (DMC) specimen. The decreasing rate of IFSS was the fastest in bioactive glass fiber/PLLA composites whereas that of chitosan fiber/PLLA composites was the slowest. Work of adhesion, Wa between bioactive glass fiber and PLLA was the highest, and the wettability results were consistent with the IFSS. AE energies of PEA fiber decreased gradually, and their distributions became narrower than those in the initial state with hydrolysis time. In case of bioactive glass fiber, AE energies in tensile failure were much higher than those in compression. In addition, AE parameters at the initial state were much higher than those after degradation under both tensile and compressive tests. Interfacial properties and microfailure degradation mechanisms can be important factors to control bioabsorbable composite performance.
  • Keywords
    B. Interfacial shear strength , D. Acoustic emission , Bioabsorbable composites , Degradation , Microfailure mechanisms
  • Journal title
    COMPOSITES SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    COMPOSITES SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
  • Record number

    1040016