Hip Joint
Customer:
Major Implant Manufacturer
Background:
Artificial hip joints have historically been
manufactured from various titanium alloys or a
cobalt-chrome material called Vitalium. Both materials
offer excellent bio-compatibility and strength
characteristics. In use, the
component is inserted into the femur (the thigh
bone) causing that portion of the bone to become
more rigid. On some hip joint designs it was determined
that this increased rigidity caused unnecessary
post operative discomfort. To alleviate this problem
a slot was added to the distal end of the component.
Manufacturing Challenge:
Both materials used for hip joints, titanium
and Vitalium, are extremely difficult to machine
using conventional techniques. Abrasive grinding
or milling is costly and slow. Non-conventional
techniques such as EDM are effective but are also
slow and create a secondary problem. A recast
layer is formed at the electrode/part
interface which is not bio-compatible and must
be removed by some secondary process.
Solution:
Electrochemical Grinding (ECG) overcomes all
of these obstacles. Electrochemical Grinding is
very productive compared to EDM and does not introduce
unwanted bio-compatibility issues. Electrochemical
Grinding is also much more effective than conventional
methods (abrasive grinding or milling) on exotic
materials. The process does not generate excessive
heat, creates no burrs eliminating secondary operations,
and machines well on electrochemically reactive
materials such as Vitalium. The internal slot
finish on a Vitalium hip joint is about 4 - 8
Ra.
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