Sintered mouldings offer a wide range of possible applications. Their composition can be adapted to their intended use by the targeted addition of specific elements and/or compounds thereof. Aluminium oxide and zirconium oxide, for example, are ceramic materials which, individually or in combination with one another, can be processed into sintered mouldings such as cutting tools, catalyst supports or prostheses.
The object of the invention is to provide a sintered moulding made of a ceramic material which combines optimum properties such as hardness, elasticity and thermal conductivity and is particularly suitable for medical technology applications.
Surprisingly, it has been shown that a sintered moulding of the following composition is particularly suitable for use in the field of medical technology, for example for use as an orthosis or endoprosthesis, such as hip and knee joint implants.
The dominant structural component of a sintered moulding of this type is aluminium oxide. The property-determining features, such as hardness, modulus of elasticity and thermal conductivity, are therefore very close to the properties of pure aluminium oxide. The components zirconium oxide and strontium aluminate are embedded in the aluminium oxide matrix. The strontium aluminate forms characteristic plate-like crystallites, platelets, which make a significant contribution to the increase in strength.
The components zirconium oxide and strontium aluminate contribute to the increase in fracture toughness, which is about 60% higher than is the case with pure aluminium oxide. These reinforcing components result in an increase in strength by a factor of almost 2, and at the same time the damage tolerance, i.e. the property of the sintered moulding to retain high residual strength even with possible damage, also increases.
When the sintered compact according to the invention is under high mechanical stress, mechanisms are surprisingly activated which, for example, inhibit or stop crack propagation. The most important mechanism here is the stress-induced conversion of the zirconium oxide from the tetragonal to the monoclinic phase. The volume expansion of the zirconium oxide associated with the conversion causes the formation of local compressive stresses, which counteracts the external tensile load and thus prevents crack growth.
Surprisingly, the crack path is deflected by the embedded platelets, and so additional energy is absorbed during crack propagation.
It may be regarded as a special feature of the sintered moulding according to the invention that the two mechanisms mutually reinforce one another so that the effective increase in fracture toughness is even greater than would be expected from the simple addition of the individual mechanisms.
The production of sintered mouldings takes place by conventional ceramics technology. The essential process steps are:
The properties of the sintered moulding can be further reinforced by means of inclusions. Thus, it is possible to mix whiskers and/or fibres into the material before shaping a sintered compact, or to incorporate net-like structures or woven fabrics into the material in the green state. The whiskers, fibres or nets or woven fabrics must be made of a material which does not interact with the ceramic material in a way that would lead to an impairment of its properties. Furthermore, the material must not become modified during sintering in a way that would damage the material.
The sintered mouldings according to the invention surprisingly combine the best properties of sintered mouldings of pure aluminium oxide and zirconium oxide for implant applications: hardness, ageing resistance, wetting behaviour with respect to water and high thermal conductivity are properties known from sintered mouldings of aluminium oxide, and high strength and high fracture toughness, i.e. damage tolerance, are properties known from sintered mouldings of zirconium oxide.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2007 020 471.1 | Apr 2007 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12597557 | Oct 2009 | US |
Child | 13372554 | US |