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Hyperelastic behavior of TiNi metal knit under uniaxial tension G. A. Baigonakova, E. S. Marchenko, Yu. F. Yasenchuk, M. A. Kovaleva

Contributor(s): Baigonakova, Gulsharat A | Marchenko, Ekaterina S | Yasenchuk, Yuriy F | Kovaleva, Marina AMaterial type: ArticleArticleContent type: Текст Media type: электронный Other title: Hyperelastic behavior of knitted TiNi mesh under uniaxial tension [Other title]Subject(s): эффект памяти формы | сверхэластичность | неупругие деформации | проволоки TiNi | нитинол | одноосное растяжение | термоупругие мартенситные превращенияGenre/Form: статьи в сборниках Online resources: Click here to access online In: International conference on shape memory and superelastic technologies (SMST 2022) : 60 Years of Nitinol : Carlsbad, California, USA, 16-20 May 2022 P. 73-74Abstract: TiNi-based alloys belong to the class of materials with shape memory effects and superelasticity, which are currently being actively studied and successfully used in engineering and medicine. In these alloys, their natural ability to undergo large inelastic deformations and return to their original shape by increasing temperature or relieving stress takes place. The key characteristic of these phenomena is thermoelastic martensitic transformations (MT). The problem of biocompatibility of implants is very relevant, as the number of operations using implants in various fields of medicine is growing rapidly. Currently, a large number of studies are underway on the deformation behavior of biological tissues and various implant materials. Wires made of TiNi are one of the most important metal biomedical materials used in endovascular surgery, orthodontics, soft tissue plastics in the form of stents, catheters, orthodontic archwires, metal-knitted materials [1-3]. Textile implants should be singled out from a wide range of structures made of thin TiNi wire, with the help of which complex surgical problems are solved. A variety of mesh structures made of titanium nickelide are characterized by a particular complexity of deformation characteristics, the manifestation of which in the implant-bio-tissue interface is difficult to predict. To create the appropriate mechanical behaviour of an implant in the form of mesh structures, it is necessary to study their deformation behaviour. Therefore, to describe the functioning of a superelastic implant in the interface with a biological tissue, the aim of this work is to study the deformation behavior of wire samples 40, 60, and 90 µm thick from the TiNi alloy and metal knit made from them by the method of uniaxial tension.
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TiNi-based alloys belong to the class of materials with shape memory effects and superelasticity, which are currently being actively studied and successfully used in engineering and medicine. In these alloys, their natural ability to undergo large inelastic deformations and return to their original shape by increasing temperature or relieving stress takes place. The key characteristic of these phenomena is thermoelastic martensitic transformations (MT). The problem of biocompatibility of implants is very relevant, as the number of operations using implants in various fields of medicine is growing rapidly. Currently, a large number of studies are underway on the deformation behavior of biological tissues and various implant materials. Wires made of TiNi are one of the most important metal biomedical materials used in endovascular surgery, orthodontics, soft tissue plastics in the form of stents, catheters, orthodontic archwires, metal-knitted materials [1-3]. Textile implants should be singled out from a wide range of structures made of thin TiNi wire, with the help of which complex surgical problems are solved. A variety of mesh structures made of titanium nickelide are characterized by a particular complexity of deformation characteristics, the manifestation of which in the implant-bio-tissue interface is difficult to predict. To create the appropriate mechanical behaviour of an implant in the form of mesh structures, it is necessary to study their deformation behaviour. Therefore, to describe the functioning of a superelastic implant in the interface with a biological tissue, the aim of this work is to study the deformation behavior of wire samples 40, 60, and 90 µm thick from the TiNi alloy and metal knit made from them by the method of uniaxial tension.

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