[Publications]

2008 ORS Conference Poster: Notch Sensitivity Behavior of PEEK in Monotonic Tension

    • Reference:
    • Sobieraj M, Kurtz SM, Rimnac CM. Notch sensitivity behavior of PEEK in monotonic tension. Transactions of the 54th Annual Meeting of the Orthopedic Research Society, Poster 1685, 2008. Accessed online at http: http://www.ors.org/web/Transactions/54/1685.PDF.
    • Keywords:
    • PEEK, monotonic tension, notch, fracture, stress concentration
    • Permissions:
    • A PDF of the conference abstract can be downloaded directly from the ORS website. The PDF of the conference poster is made available on www.medicalpeek.org with the permission of the authors.

Download PDF


Abstract

Spine and orthopedic components contain stress-risers, thus it is of interest to determine the notch sensitivity behavior of PEEK. The objective of this study was to investigate the axial true stress behavior of PEEK with and without the presence of a stress concentration.

The PEEK material used in this study was OPTIMA LT1 (Invibio, Inc.). Specimens were pre-conditioned in a 37C PBS bath for 8 weeks. 3 tensile specimen geometries were evaluated: unnotched cylindrical dog-bone (D=8mm); and 2 circumferentially grooved (Ushape) dog-bone. 6-10 specimens were tested in each geometry/rate group. Monotonic testing to failure was conducted at 2 displacement rates (6mm/min and 30mm/min) at 37C. Significant necking occurred in the unnotched specimens with propagation of the neck sometimes extending throughout the entire specimen. In contrast, the notched specimens behaved in a brittle manner. Notching caused a significant reduction (p < 0.05) in the true axial fracture stress with increasing severity causing a significant reduction between the two notch geometries (rate held constant). Increasing the rate of extension resulted in a small but significant increase in the true axial stress at fracture in each geometric condition (p < 0.05).

Therefore, in this study, PEEK demonstrated significant notch sensitivity (reduction in fracture stress) in tension. The finding that PEEK notch weakens in tension supports the need for careful consideration of the location and severity of notch risers in joint replacement and other orthopaedic components.

Acknowledgements: NIH AR47192; Wilbert J. Austin Chair; Invibio, Inc.; NIH GM07250; NIH AR07505