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Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering

Utah State University

Corrosion

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Corrosion Of Metal Hip Arthroplasties And Its Possible Role In Loosening, H. K. Koerten, J. J. A. M. Van Raay, J. J. M. Onderwater, F. P. Bernoski, P. M. Rozing Jan 1997

Corrosion Of Metal Hip Arthroplasties And Its Possible Role In Loosening, H. K. Koerten, J. J. A. M. Van Raay, J. J. M. Onderwater, F. P. Bernoski, P. M. Rozing

Cells and Materials

Tissue removed with human hip arthroplasties during revision surgery of 45 patients was evaluated by transmission electron microscopy and X -ray microanalysis (XRMA). The results show that microscopic and submicroscopic particles are abundantly present in the tissue at the tissue/implant interface. XRMA of individual particles shows that the chemical composition of a portion of the particles was in agreement with that of the retrieved implants. Regularly, particulates with a dissimilar chemical composition were found. Sometimes, these particles could be recognized as filler particles of the cements used. Other particles could partly or completely be composed of the chemical elements that …


Effects Of Solidification Conditions And Heat Treatment On The Microstructure And Vickers Hardness Of Pd-Cu-Ga Dental Alloys, William A. Brantley, Zhuo Cai, Stanley G. Vermilyea, Efstratios Papazoglou, John C. Mitchell, Alan B. Carr Jan 1996

Effects Of Solidification Conditions And Heat Treatment On The Microstructure And Vickers Hardness Of Pd-Cu-Ga Dental Alloys, William A. Brantley, Zhuo Cai, Stanley G. Vermilyea, Efstratios Papazoglou, John C. Mitchell, Alan B. Carr

Cells and Materials

Two representative Pd-Cu-Ga dental alloys, one with a dendritic as-cast microstructure containing a eutectic interdendritic constituent and the other with an equiaxed fine-grained as-cast microstructure containing a near-surface eutectic constituent, have been subjected to rapid quenching following casting, in addition to the conventional bench cooling recommended by the manufacturers. The quenched alloys were subsequently heat treated at temperatures of 1200°, 1500° and 1800 op that span the range of the firing cycles for dental porcelain. Scanning electron microscopic examination showed that the lamellar eutectic constituents normally present in the microstructures of the as-cast and bench-cooled alloys persisted when the alloys …