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    Single and double stage sintering of mechanically alloyed powder for nanostructured Ti6Al4V foams usable in cancellous scaffolds

    , Article International Heat Treatment and Surface Engineering ; Volume 7, Issue 1 , 2013 , Pages 43-48 ; 17495148 (ISSN) Sadrnezhaad, S. K ; Aryana, M ; Hassanzadeh Nemati, N ; Alizadeh, M ; Ebadifar, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    Mechanical alloying and sintering were used to fabricate nanostructured Ti6Al4V scaffolds of highly controllable pore geometry and fully interconnected porous network. Elemental powders were milled for different periods of time (10, 20, 30, 40 and 60 h), mixed with 40-60 vol.-% of 200-400 μm cuboidal NaCl, compacted at 500-600 MPa and sintered according to single or double stage heat treatment regimes at 790 and 950°C under vacuum. After sintering, the samples were soaked in distilled water to washout the NaCl. Foamy microstructures were obtained showing well shaped biopores and fragmentary embedded micropores. The shape of initial NaCl was copied into the biopores which had highly... 

    Manipulating failure mechanism of rapid prototyped scaffolds by changing nodal connectivity and geometry of the pores

    , Article Journal of Biomechanics ; Volume 45, Issue 16 , 2012 , Pages 2866-2875 ; 00219290 (ISSN) Amirkhani, S ; Bagheri, R ; Zehtab Yazdi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    The performance of cellular solids in biomedical applications relies strongly on a detailed understanding of the effects of pore topology on mechanical properties. This study aims at characterizing the failure mechanism of scaffolds based on nodal connectivity (number of struts that meet in joints) and geometry of the pores. Plastic models of scaffolds having the same relative density but different cubic and trigonal unit cells were designed and then fabricated via three dimensional (3-D) printing. Unit cells were repeated in different arrangements in 3-D space. An in-situ imaging technique was utilized to study the progressive deformation of the scaffold models. Different nodal... 

    Pore control in SMA NiTi scaffolds via space holder usage

    , Article Materials Science and Engineering C ; Volume 32, Issue 5 , 2012 , Pages 1266-1270 ; 09284931 (ISSN) Ghasemi, A ; Hosseini, S. R ; Sadrnezhaad, S. K ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    Porous NiTi shape memory alloy (SMA) was fabricated by sintering of compressed constituent elements pre-mixed with NaCl or urea spacer holders. Effect of spacer to metal volume-ratio (r S) on shape, size, distribution and openness of the voids was probed by optical metallography, X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to determine the SMA transformation temperatures. Controllable void geometry helping osteoblast proliferation and bone cell growth was gained by addition of the spacers. At r S = 0.7, percentage of the open pores reached 52% while at r S = 1.43, interconnected pores with 200 to 500 μm diameter were... 

    Effect of pore geometry and loading direction on deformation mechanism of rapid prototyped scaffolds

    , Article Acta Materialia ; Volume 60, Issue 6-7 , 2012 , Pages 2778-2789 ; 13596454 (ISSN) Amirkhani, S ; Bagheri, R ; Zehtab Yazdi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    Rapid prototyping is a promising technique for producing tissue engineering scaffolds due to its capacity to generate predetermined forms and structures featuring distinct pore architectures. The objective of this study is to investigate the influences of different pore geometries and their orientation with respect to the compressive loading direction on mechanical responses of scaffolds. Plastic models of scaffolds with cubic and hexagonal unit cells were fabricated by three-dimensional (3-D) printing. An in situ imaging technique was utilized to study the progressive compressive deformation of the scaffold models. In both cubic and hexagonal geometries, organized buckling patterns relevant... 

    Quantifying the role of pore geometry and medium heterogeneity on heavy oil recovery during solvent/Co-solvent flooding inwater-wet systems

    , Article Journal of Porous Media ; Volume 14, Issue 4 , 2011 , Pages 363-373 ; 1091028X (ISSN) Dehghan, A. A ; Kharrat, R ; Ghazanfari, M. H ; Vossoughi, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Porous medium characteristics (e.g., pore geometry and medium heterogeneity) as well as the chemical nature of the co-solvents crucially affect the oil displacement efficiency during solvent flooding processes. In this work, initially saturated models with heavy crude oil were used to perform a series of solvent injection experiments. Several onequarter five-spot micromodels with pre-designed pore geometry were constructed and used. In addition, rock-look-alike flow patterns generated from thin sections of sandstone and dolomite reservoir rocks were etched onto glass plates to form micromodels mimicking the pore geometry and heterogeneity of these rocks. Four different groups of chemicals... 

    Pore-scale Simulation of the Effect of Pore Geometry and Surface Heterogeneity on Oil Recovery by Low-salinity Water Flooding

    , M.Sc. Thesis Sharif University of Technology Ahmadi Falavarjani, Ali (Author) ; Mahani, Hassan (Supervisor) ; Ayatollahi, Shahabodin (Supervisor)
    Abstract
    Low-salinity waterflooding (LSWF) is a promising EOR approach that decreases the oil-wetness of reservoir rocks, hence increasing the recovery factor. Despite the importance of the pore-geometry on the performance of LSWF, especially in 3D simulations being affected by corner-flow and roughness, it is not yet investigated, thus in this thesis we aim at studying the aforementioned effects on LSWF. According to the preceding studies, during the drainage phase, the brines in the corners of pores cannot be displaced by oil because of requiring very high capillary pressure; thereby rendering a mixed-wet system. Hence considering this type of wettability is necessary for two-phase flow...