Publications by authors named "GC Weatherly"

A model is presented which uses the hardness and elastic moduli of brittle crystals, determined using the Vickers microindentation test, to predict the uniaxial compaction behavior of compacts. A general approach first developed in the materials science field to predict the densification of particulate matter under hydrostatic loading was followed. Modifications to account for the effects of particle geometry and the closed-die loading conditions were considered.

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A model is presented which uses the Vickers microindentation hardness of ductile crystals such as sodium chloride to predict the uniaxial compaction behavior of compacts. A general approach first developed in the materials science field to predict the densification of particulate matter under hydrostatic loading was followed. However, modifications to account for the effects of particle geometry and the closed-die loading conditions were considered.

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The deformation kinetics of sucrose crystals were evaluated using the Vickers microindentation technique. A (100) face of a crystal of sucrose was indented for varying lengths of time at temperatures ranging from 23 to 103 degrees C, and the deformation kinetics analysis proposed by Verrall et al. (1) was employed to calculate the strain rate and stress from the indentation time and the size of the indentation.

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Syrian hamster embryo cells have been grown in culture on thin (10-50 nm), evaporated substrates of chromium, and examined by analytical transmission electron microscopy. After 10 d exposure, significant metal uptake was observed and numerous cell colonies showed the physical characteristics of carcinogenic transformation. The majority of the ingested chromium appeared to be associated with nucleic acid complexes.

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The brittleness of pharmaceutical crystals influences their ability to form compacts of acceptable quality. While many macroscopic methods are available to elucidate the fracture behavior of materials, the porosity, inhomogeneity, and anisotropy of pharmaceutical compacts render it difficult to interpret the results of these tests. Microindentation techniques may be used to evaluate both the flow and the fracture characteristics of small crystals, so that it is not necessary to test compacts.

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The fatigue behaviour of Ti-6Al-4V (extra low interstital) alloy coated with Ti-6Al-4V powder was investigated using rotating bending fatigue testing. It was found that the high cycle fatigue strength of porous coated specimens exhibited a substantial decrease compared to uncoated specimens of the same microstructure. Chemical analysis of the sintered surface revealed significant increases of interstitials compared to the bulk analysis, but it is concluded that this would not adversely affect the fatigue strength.

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Twenty-four rectangular metal plates were fabricated with surface regions in three different pore size ranges (5-20 microns, 20-50 microns, 50-200 microns). The plates were implanted into the dorsal subcutaneous tissue of 12 adult mongrel dogs for periods of 4, 8, 12, and 16 weeks. After animal sacrifice, the fibrous tissue which adhered to the porous-surfaced regions of each plate was mechanically peeled off to give an indication of the strength of tissue attachment.

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To study the effects of dynamic loading on biologic fixation, an unconstrained type of prosthesis was designed for total replacement of the knee joint of dogs. The femoral component was fabricated from cast cobalt-based surgical alloy. The tibial component was fabricated from surgical grade, ultra-high molecular weight, high density polyethylene.

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Phase relationships in cast Co--Cr surgical implant alloys, heat treated at temperatures from 1180 to 1300 degrees C, are reported. Interdendritic material was identified by selected area diffraction as a quaternary near eutectic mixture between sigma phase, M23C6, M7C3, and fcc Co. Incipient melting and subsequent resolidification of this near-eutectic mixture accounts for observations of behavior at temperatures above 1235 degrees C.

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Bone remodeling due to stress-shielding has been studied using a model system consisting of metal-polymer laminated fixation plates securely fixed to canine femurs. The plate stiffness was controlled by varying the ratio of metal facing to polymer core thickness in the laminate design while secure fixation to bone was achieved by providing a porous bone interfacing surface for the ingrowth of bone from the periosteal surface. Observations of laterally and medially placed plates indicated resorption in the area of the periosteal and endosteal bone surfaces respectively, for the higher stiffness composite plates used.

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Porous surfaced femoral components of hip prostheses stabilized by tissue ingrowth are often situated a certain distance away from the endosteal cortex in the diaphysis. The purpose of this study was to examine the significance of this space between an implant and the cortex on bone growth into the porous surface of the implant. Intramedullary rods of different diameters with porous surface regions made of powder metal were inserted into the femurs of adult beagles.

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For a study on the effects of pore size variation on the rate of bone growth into porous-surfaced metallic implants and on the strength of fixation resulting from this ingrowth, 4 distinct pore size ranges were prepared on cobalt-base alloy implants with cobalt-base alloy powder particles of different dimensions. The porous implants were placed into canine femurs for periods of 4, 8, and 12 weeks. Mechanical tests were performed to measure the shear strength of fixation of the implants to cortical bone.

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In an attempt to gain information that could be directly applied to the design of clinical porous-surfaced prostheses intended for biological attachment by bone ingrowth, the tensile strength of the bone-implant interface was expressed as a function of 2 fundamentally different porous-surface configurations. Using powder metallurgy techniques, standard 3-hole fracture fixation plates were prepared with both a single and a multiple layer of spherically shaped metal powder particles on the bone-contacting surface to produce implants with different porous surfaces. These plates were implanted onto the lateral aspect of canine femurs for periods of 4, 6, 8, 12, 18, and 24 weeks.

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