EGRB 427 Biomaterials test 1 study set
Which type of degradation includes water flowing in faster than rate of polymer hydrolysis?
Bulk (no change in size, reduce mechanical properties)
What is the CN, # of atoms, and APF of face centered cubic?
CN = 12, atoms = 4, APF = 0.74
What is the CN, # of atoms, and APF of simple cubic?
CN = 6, atoms = 1, APF = 0.52
What is the CN, # of atoms, and APF of body centered cubic?
CN = 8, atoms = 2, APF = 0.68
Which material must maintain electroneutrality?
Ceramics
What are the factors affecting Tg?
Chain flexibility, Chemical constituents, crosslinking, increased MW
What is isomerism?
Compounds that have the same molecular formula but different structural formula. cis and trans cis is more flexible, trans more crystalline
What is crevice corrosion?
Corrosion driven by repetitive breakdown and re-passivation. Low pH and lack of oxygen.
What are the 3 stages of fatigue?
Crack initiation, Crack propagation, final failure
A smaller R group means the material is more crystalline or amorphous?
Crystalline
What are the 5 chemical determinants of polymers?
Crystallinity, Side group (R) type and size, R configuration, chain structure, and molecular weight
What are spherulites?
Crystals radiating from a nucleus with amorphous material in between (rubber)
What is creep?
Deformation over time under constant pressure
What is a regenerative material?
Degrades and replaces in a way that stimulates cell response
What are the factors affecting Tm?
Degree of branching and MW
Which characterization technique works for identifying percent crystallinity of polymer?
Differential Scanning Calorimetry
Where is burger's vector in edge, screw, and mixed dislocation?
Edge - magnitude and direction of dislocation is perpendicular to dislocation line screw - parallel mixed - changes as you move through material
Which characterization technique works for identifying the composition and structure of polymer?
FTIR
How do brittle fractures happen in relation to grain boundaries?
Fractures go through or along grain boundaries
What are the 2 types of defects in ceramics?
Frenkel and Schottky defects
Which characterization technique works for identifying PI of polymer sample?
Gel Permeation Chromatography
For copolymers chain structure, order crystallinity from most to least
Graft, block, alternating, random
What is precipitation hardening?
Heat treatment to strengthen material (includes quenching for rapid cooldown)
What are the 2 steps for initiating oxidation?
Homolysis and heterolysis
What are the 2 secondary bonds?
Hydrogen, van der waal
What are the 3 steps to create a polymer?
Initiation (add free radical) propagation (repetition) termination
What are the 3 classes of biomaterials?
Inorganic materials, inorganic ceramics, and organic polymers
What are the 3 primary bonds?
Ionic, covalent, metallic
What are the 3 types of tacticity?
Isotactic (all R groups on one side) syndiotactic (alternating R group placement) atactic (no pattern)
What conditions are favorable for hydrolysis?
*carbon double bond to oxygen* higher cleavable bonds, hydrophilic material, higher MW lower crystallinity, lower cross linking
What is a bioactive material?
a material with a bong between it and the host
What are point defects?
1-2 atoms that are either vacant or self-interstitial which result in local lattice strain
What are the 4 steps to determining the miller index?
1. Determine intercepts ( if parallel, intercept is infinity) (1,inf,inf) 2. take reciprocal (1,0,0) 3. multiply to clear fractions (1,0,0) 4. record in parenthesis with no commas (1 0 0)
What is galvanic corrosion?
2 similar metals coupled in body that cause corrosion via redox reaction.
What are linear defects?
5 to 100M one dimensional defect of atom misalignment that results in large mechanical deformation in crystalline solid
What is passivation?
A layer of oxides formed on the surface of a metal that provides corrosion protection.
What is a bioinert material?
A material with no toxic response or scar tissue formation
What is crazing?
A network of fine cracks. Can't be felt on the surface, can continue to support load.
What is alloying?
Adding metals to reduce lattice strain, which makes it harder for dislocation glide to occur
What are the 2 types of polymerization?
Addition polymerization and condensation (aka step growth) polymerization
What are the methods to add defects in metals?
Alloying strain hardening (cold work) grain size refinement (annealing) precipitation hardening (volume defects)
What are the 4 different chain structures?
Linear, branched, cross-linked, network
For the least amount of variation, should the Polydispersity index (Mw/Mn) be high or low
Low (as close to 1 as possible)
What is annealing?
Manipulation of Microstructure to recover ductility lost from strain hardening by heating up material.
What is the molecular cause of creep in polymers?
Movement of chains in amorphous region via viscous flow, relative to Tg
Which characterization technique works for identifying structure by relative H atoms
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy
How do you predict corrosion?
Pourbaix diagram
For volume defects, what is the difference between precipitate and void defects?
Precipitate are a cluster of impurities while void is an aggregate of vacancies
What are the 3 stages of creep?
Primary - repositioning of dislocations secondary - creep slows tertiary - formation of gross defects (leads to failure)
What kind of bonds are polymers?
Primary bonds / covalent bonds
What kind of bonds are ceramics?
Primary bonds / ionic bonds
What is pitting corrosion?
Processing that leads to small flaws where passivation film is disrupted
Are sigma or pi bonds stronger?
Sigma
What are the 3 crystal unit cells?
Simple cubic, body centered cubic, face centered cubic
What is the difference between spectroscopy and chromatography?
Spectrography is how different components absorb different types of energy. Chromatography is physically separating molecules based on chemical properties.
What type of degradation includes water flowing in slower than hydrolysis?
Surface ( hydrophobic, maintains chemical properties but shrinks)
What are the 2 primary mechanisms of polymer degradation?
Swelling/Dissolution and chain scission
What is a mer?
The basic repetitive unit of a polymer structure
Which characterization technique works for identifying the concentration of a component in a meterial
UV-vis spectrography
Is a chain structure with double and triple bonds saturated or unsaturated?
Unsaturated
What is hydrlysis?
Water driven cleavage of bonds.
Which characterization technique works for identifying atomic crystal structure?
X-ray diffraction (XRD)
What is a bioresorbable material?
a material that degrades in the body, dissolutes, and is secreted
What type of copolymers have the highest probability of crystallization?
alternating and block. Graft is inclined to hinder secondary interactions and now allow for ordered packing
What is the second quantum number and what does it mean?
angular momentum (l) is the shape orbital. l=n-1. 0=s 1=p 2=d 3=f
Why do we create pores? What are some disadvantages to this?
cell proliferation, new tissue growth, tissue vascularization. Some disadvantages are mechanics, biodegradability, and corrosion
What are the different types of linear defects?
edge, screw, and mix dislocations
For metallic bonds, more mobile electrons around the core cation means more what?
electrical conductivity
Why can failure occur at stress below yield strength
fatigue failure (90% of failure in metals)
What is Tc?
temperature where polymers with the ability to crystallize will do so. Used as processing parameter
What is Tg?
glass transition temperature
What is the molecular cause of creep in metals and ceramics?
grain boundary movement
What affects the rate of polymer degradation?
hydrolysis and enzymatic degradation
Describe the relationship between stress relaxation with crystallinity and Tg
inc. crystallinity = dec. SR If temp is less than Tg, no SR If temp is more than Tg, SR happens
What do double and triple covalent bonds do to the material?
increase rigidity
What is strain hardening / cold work?
increasing number of line defects, carried out at low temp relative to Tm. Improves strength, decreases ductility
For solutes, what is the difference between interstitial and substitutional solution.
interstitial fill the space between atoms. substitutional take the place of a solvent atom. They typically cause less than 15% difference in atomic radii.
For 2D planar defects, having a small angle grain boundary means what?
larger grains, increased stability, decreased energy
What is the third quantum number and what does it mean?
magnetic quantum number (ml) is the orientation of the orbital. l=0: m=0. l=1: m=-1,0,1. l=2: m=-2,-1,0,1-2. l=3: m=-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3
How do you indicate negative values in miller indices?
negative bar over the number
what is a coordination number?
number of nearest atomic neighbors
What is solid state diffusion?
point defects are not fixed in place, so higher temperature means more diffusion. This results in movement of atoms through a solid to form a new mineral
What are elastomers?
polymers that are fluid at room temperature and turn into solid via polymerization processes with cross linking return to coiled state because it is more thermodynamically favorable
What is the first quantum number and what does it mean?
principal quantum number (n) is the distance from the center of the nucleus
What does the stability of ceramics depend on?
radius of cations / radius of anions (rc/ra). Higher = more stable. MUST MAINTAIN ELECTRONEUTRALITY
What is intergranular corrosion?
remove grain boundary Material from a metal.
What happens at Tm?
secondary bonds break
What are the determinants of crystallinity?
side groups, tacticity, degree of branching, and regularity in mer placement
If you want a more crystalline structure, what kind of R group do you want?
small R group because it allows the chains to pack more closely together.
For 2D planar defects, having a large angle grain boundary means what?
small grains, decreased stability, increased energy, surface tension
What is the fourth quantum number and what does it mean.
spin (ms) which direction electron is spinning (2,6,10,14)
What is the formula for atomic packing factor?
volume of atoms / size of atom
What is a lamella?
weight-bearing, column-like matrix tubes composed mainly of collagen. Basic unit of crystalline structure