The stress-strain behaviour of coronary stent struts is size dependent

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Abstract

Coronary stents are used to re-establish the vascular lumen and flow conditions within the coronary arteries; the typical thickness of a stent strut is 100 mum, and average grain sizes of approximately 25 mum exist in stainless steel stents. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of strut size on the stress strain behavior of 316 L stainless steel. Other materials have shown a size dependence at the micron size scale; however, at present there are no studies that show a material property size dependence in coronary stents. Electropolished stainless steel stent struts within the size range of 60-500 mum were tensile tested. The results showed that within the size range of coronary stent struts a size dependent stress-strain relationship is required. to describe the material. Finite element models of the final phase of fracture, i.e., void growth models, explained partially the reason for this size effect. This study demonstrated that a size based stress-strain relationship must be used to describe the tensile behavior material of 316 L stainless steel at the size scale of coronary stent struts. (C) 2003 Biomedical Engineering Society.
Original languageEnglish (Ireland)
Pages (from-to)686-691
Number of pages6
JournalAnnals Of Biomedical Engineering
Volume31
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2003

Keywords

  • 316 L stainless steel
  • Coronary stents
  • Plastic deformation
  • Stress-strain behavior

Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)

  • Authors
  • Murphy, B.P., Savage, P., McHugh, P.E., Quinn, D.
  • Murphy, BP;Savage, P;McHugh, PE;Quinn, DF

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