Journal article 1186 views 273 downloads
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP
E. Langford,
C.A. Griffiths,
Christian Griffiths
AIMS Bioengineering, Volume: 5, Issue: 3, Pages: 133 - 150
Swansea University Author: Christian Griffiths
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DOI (Published version): 10.3934/bioeng.2018.3.133
Abstract
The focus of this research is the ability to manufacture, when using layer base production methods, the medical insert known as ITAP used for prosthetic attachment in a femur. It has been demonstrated using computational modelling that a 3-dimensional build of the ITAP has the lowest stress present...
Published in: | AIMS Bioengineering |
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ISSN: | 2375-1495 |
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2018
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa44454 |
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2018-11-13T16:35:53.4554110 v2 44454 2018-09-20 The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP 84c202c256a2950fbc52314df6ec4914 Christian Griffiths Christian Griffiths true false 2018-09-20 ACEM The focus of this research is the ability to manufacture, when using layer base production methods, the medical insert known as ITAP used for prosthetic attachment in a femur. It has been demonstrated using computational modelling that a 3-dimensional build of the ITAP has the lowest stress present when the honeycomb infill pattern’s percentage is set at 100%, with the ITAP being constructed on a horizontal printing bed with the shear forces acting adjacent to the honeycomb structure. The testing has followed the British standard ISO 527-2:2012, which shows a layer base printed tensile test sample, with a print setting of 100% infill and at a side print orientation; this was found to withstand a greater load before failure than any other printed test configuration. These findings have been validated through simulations that analyses the compression, shear and torque forces acting upon an augmented femur, with an imbedded ITAP model. Journal Article AIMS Bioengineering 5 3 133 150 2375-1495 Prosthetics; ITAP; additive manufactured; layer based production; tensile testing; computational modelling 31 12 2018 2018-12-31 10.3934/bioeng.2018.3.133 COLLEGE NANME Aerospace, Civil, Electrical, and Mechanical Engineering COLLEGE CODE ACEM Swansea University 2018-11-13T16:35:53.4554110 2018-09-20T10:07:12.3801397 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Aerospace, Civil, Electrical, General and Mechanical Engineering - General Engineering E. Langford 1 C.A. Griffiths 2 Christian Griffiths 3 0044454-20092018100959.pdf langford2018.pdf 2018-09-20T10:09:59.8130000 Output 1183241 application/pdf Version of Record true 2018-09-20T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP |
spellingShingle |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP Christian Griffiths |
title_short |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP |
title_full |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP |
title_fullStr |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP |
title_full_unstemmed |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP |
title_sort |
The mechanical strength of additive manufactured intraosseous transcutaneous amputation prosthesis, known as the ITAP |
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84c202c256a2950fbc52314df6ec4914 |
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84c202c256a2950fbc52314df6ec4914_***_Christian Griffiths |
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Christian Griffiths |
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E. Langford C.A. Griffiths Christian Griffiths |
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AIMS Bioengineering |
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description |
The focus of this research is the ability to manufacture, when using layer base production methods, the medical insert known as ITAP used for prosthetic attachment in a femur. It has been demonstrated using computational modelling that a 3-dimensional build of the ITAP has the lowest stress present when the honeycomb infill pattern’s percentage is set at 100%, with the ITAP being constructed on a horizontal printing bed with the shear forces acting adjacent to the honeycomb structure. The testing has followed the British standard ISO 527-2:2012, which shows a layer base printed tensile test sample, with a print setting of 100% infill and at a side print orientation; this was found to withstand a greater load before failure than any other printed test configuration. These findings have been validated through simulations that analyses the compression, shear and torque forces acting upon an augmented femur, with an imbedded ITAP model. |
published_date |
2018-12-31T13:34:53Z |
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1822046859763384320 |
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11.048453 |