Influence of annealing and biaxial expansion on the properties of Poly-l-lactic) medical tubing.
Date
2019-07-11Author
Dillon, Brian
Doran, Patrick
Fuenmayor, Evert
Healy, Andrew V.
Gately, Noel M.
Major, Ian
Lyons, John G.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Poly-l-lactic acid (PLLA) is one of the most common bioabsorbable materials in the medical
device field. However, its use in load-bearing applications is limited due to its inferior mechanical
properties when compared to many of the competing metal-based permanent and bioabsorbable
materials. The objective of this study was to directly compare the influence of both annealing and
biaxial expansion processes to improve the material properties of PLLA. Results showed that both
annealing and biaxial expansion led to an overall increase in crystallinity and that the crystallites
formed during both processes were in the ’ and forms. 2D-WAXS patterns showed that the
preferred orientation of crystallites formed during annealing was parallel to the circumferential
direction. While biaxial expansion resulted in orientation in both axial and circumferential directions,
with relatively equal sized crystals in both directions, Da (112 Å) and Dc (97 Å). The expansion process
had the most profound e ect on mechanical performance, with a 65% increase in Young’s modulus, a
45% increase in maximum tensile stress and an 18-fold increase in strain at maximum load. These
results indicate that biaxially expanding PLLA at a temperature above Tcc is possible, due to the high
strain rates associated with stretch blow moulding.
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