Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials
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J Mech Behav Biomed Mater · Apr 2015
High compressive pre-strains reduce the bending fatigue life of nitinol wire.
Prior to implantation, Nitinol-based transcatheter endovascular devices are subject to a complex thermo-mechanical pre-strain associated with constraint onto a delivery catheter, device sterilization, and final deployment. Though such large thermo-mechanical excursions are known to impact the microstructural and mechanical properties of Nitinol, their effect on fatigue properties is still not well understood. The present study investigated the effects of large thermo-mechanical pre-strains on the fatigue of pseudoelastic Nitinol wire using fully reversed rotary bend fatigue (RBF) experiments. ⋯ Further, the mechanisms underlying fatigue were found to be similar; despite large differences in cycles to failure across strain amplitudes and pre-strain levels, cracks initiated from surface inclusions in nearly all wires. Compressive pre-strain-induced damage may accelerate such crack initiation, thereby reducing fatigue life. The results of the present study indicate that large compressive pre-strains are detrimental to the fatigue properties of Nitinol, and, taken together, the findings underscore the importance of accounting for thermo-mechanical history in the design and testing of wire-based percutaneous implants.