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Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Biomaterials

Clemson University

Theses/Dissertations

Additive manufacturing

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering

3d Printing With Photopolymerizable Polyester Resins For Resorbable Medical Device Applications, Mathew Murphy Stanford May 2023

3d Printing With Photopolymerizable Polyester Resins For Resorbable Medical Device Applications, Mathew Murphy Stanford

All Dissertations

In the past decade, the healthcare industry has seen a significant increase in the use of additive manufacturing (AM or “3D printing”) with subsequent improvement in clinical outcomes.As an exceptional AM technology, vat-photopolymerization (VP), often called stereolithography, can create complex structures and has thus been adopted for a range of biomedical applications including surgical guides, temporary implants, and resorbable tissue scaffolds.However, limitations remain in the availability of photopolymerizable resin materials with appropriate mechanical performance, biodegradability, and biocompatibility for application to resorbable medical devices.

The objective of this work was to employ novel photopolymerizable polyester-based macromers in the development of resorbable …


Single Asperity Fretting Corrosion Of Traditional And Additively Manufactured Metallic Biomaterials: Quantitative Analysis From Acetabular Tapers To Micron And Nanometer Scale Tribocorrosion, Annsley Mace May 2022

Single Asperity Fretting Corrosion Of Traditional And Additively Manufactured Metallic Biomaterials: Quantitative Analysis From Acetabular Tapers To Micron And Nanometer Scale Tribocorrosion, Annsley Mace

All Dissertations

Mechanically assisted crevice corrosion (MACC) of metallic biomaterials continues to be a significant degradation mode. This is, in part, due to a lack of understanding of fundamental micron- and sub-micron scale mechanisms of metal degradation in biological environments. Metal-metal (or metal-hard) load bearing surfaces of hip arthroplasties are subjected to fretting crevice corrosion (FCC, one form of MACC). Current work in tribocorrosion involves large contact area tests with multiple asperities, with a distribution of load and wear that changes over time. A more systematic and controlled study of the FCC micro- and nanomechanics is needed.

Therefore, the goal of this …