4.5 Article

Tribological Rehydration and Its Role on Frictional Behavior of PVA/GO Hydrogels for Cartilage Replacement Under Migrating and Stationary Contact Conditions

Journal

TRIBOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 69, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11249-020-01371-0

Keywords

PVA/GO hydrogel; Porous biphasic structure; Migrating; Stationary; Tribological rehydration

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Project of Guizhou Science and Technology Department [QKHJC[2019]1085, QKHJC[2020]1Y230]
  2. Science and Technology Planning Project of Guizhou [QKHPTRC[2018]5781-16]
  3. Talent Introduction Research Project of Guizhou University [GZU[2017]01]
  4. EPSRC [EP/N025954/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Graphene oxide (GO) was incorporated into polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) hydrogel to improve its mechanical and tribological performances for potential articular cartilage replacement application. The effects of load, sliding speed, diameter of counterface, and counterface materials on the frictional coefficient of PVA/GO hydrogels were discussed. A low friction coefficient (similar to 0.03) was obtained from PVA/0.10wt%GO hydrogel natural cartilage counter pair.
Graphene oxide (GO) was incorporated into polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) hydrogel to improve its mechanical and tribological performances for potential articular cartilage replacement application. The compressive mechanical properties, creep resistance, and dynamic mechanical properties of PVA/GO hydrogels with varied GO content were studied. The frictional behavior of PVA/GO hydrogels under stationary and migrating contact configurations during reciprocal and unidirectional sliding movements were investigated. The effects of load, sliding speed, diameter of counterface, and counterface materials on the frictional coefficient of PVA/GO hydrogels were discussed. PVA/0.10wt%GO hydrogel show higher compressive modulus and creep resistance, but moderate friction coefficient. The friction coefficient of PVA/GO hydrogel under stationary and migratory contact configurations greatly depends on interstitial fluid pressurization and tribological rehydration. The friction behavior of PVA/GO hydrogels shows load, speed, and counterface diameter dependence similar to those observed in natural articular cartilage. A low friction coefficient (similar to 0.03) was obtained from PVA/0.10wt%GO hydrogel natural cartilage counter pair. [GRAPHICS] .

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