The influence of mean strain on the high-cycle fatigue of Nitinol with application to medical devices

Hengchu Cao, Ming H. Wu, Fei Zhou, Robert M. McMeeking, Robert O. Ritchie*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Citations (Scopus)
6 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

One of the contentious issues associated with the high-cycle fatigue of Nitinol, a nominally equiatomic alloy of nickel and titanium, is the claim that increasing the applied mean strain can increase, or at least have no negative impact, on the fatigue lifetime, in conflict with reported behavior for the vast majority of other metallic materials. To investigate this in further detail, cyclic fatigue tests in bending were carried out on electropolished medical grade Nitinol at 37 °C for lives of up to 400 million cycles of strain involving various levels of the mean strain. A constant life model was developed through statistical analysis of the fatigue data, with 90% reliability at a confidence level of 95% on the effective fatigue strain. Our results show that the constant life diagram, a plot of strain amplitude versus mean strain, is monotonic yet nonlinear for lives of 400 million cycles of fatigue loading. Specifically, we find that in contradiction to the aforementioned claim, the strain amplitude limit at zero mean strain is 0.55% to achieve a 400 million cycle lifetime, at 90% reliability with 95% confidence; however, to achieve the same lifetime, reliability and confidence level in the presence of a 3% or more mean strain, the required strain amplitude limit is decreased by over a factor of three to 0.16%. Moreover, for mean strains from 3% to 7%, the strain amplitude limit that allows a 400 million cycle lifetime, at 90% reliability with 95% confidence, is ~ 0.16%, and essentially independent of mean strain. We conclude that the debatable claim that an increase in the applied mean strain can increase the fatigue life of Nitinol components is not supported by the current data.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104057
Number of pages29
JournalJournal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids
Volume143
Early online date18 Jun 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Oct 2020

Bibliographical note

This research was supported by Edwards Lifesciences.

Keywords

  • Cardiovascular
  • Fatigue
  • Goodman
  • High-cycle
  • Implant
  • Nitinol
  • Reliability
  • Shape memory
  • Superelastic
  • Weibull

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