4.7 Article

Effect of sintering on the microstructure and mechanical properties of alloy titanium-wollastonite composite fabricated by powder injection moulding process

Journal

CERAMICS INTERNATIONAL
Volume 45, Issue 9, Pages 11648-11653

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceramint.2019.03.038

Keywords

Ti6Al4V/WA composite; Powder injection molding; Sintering; Microstructure; Mechanical properties

Funding

  1. University Kebangsaan Malaysia [DIP-2017-001, DCP-2017-001/2]

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Composite biomaterials are in high demand in the medical field of today. The combination of bioactive wollastonite (WA) glass ceramic with the biocompatibility of alloy titanium (Ti6Al4V) could be a good candidate for implant applications. The rheological properties of Ti6Al4V/WA feedstock show a pseudoplastic behaviour with low activation energy. The feedstock was successfully injected as a green part with no defects. The green part was solvent debound for 6 h in heptane and thermal debound in an argon environment for 1 h. The brown part was successfully sintered at 1300 degrees C for 3 h with 5 degrees C/min heating and cooling rates. The average sintered density was 4.12 g/cm(3); which is 97.5% from the theoretical density. The highest Young's modulus obtained was 18.10 GPa; which is in the range of human bone strength. EDX analysis shows that by increasing sintering temperature, the level of oxygen decreased. Cell viability test shown an absorbance increased with days increasing indicated that the cellular were proliferated on the composite Ti6Al4V/WA composite which also proved that the composite was non-toxic. This indicates that the Ti6Al4V/WA composite is suitable for bone implant applications.

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