Bone drilling with internal gas cooling: Experimental and statistical investigation of the effect of cooling with CO2 on reduction of temperature rise due to drill bit wear
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Bone drilling is a major stage in immobilization of the fracture site. During bone drilling operations, the temperature may exceed the allowable limit of 47 °C, causing irrecoverable damages of thermal necrosis and seriously threatening the fracture treatment. One of the parameters affecting the temperature rise of the drilling site is the frequency of applying the drill bit and its extent of wear. The present study attempted to mitigate the effect of drill bit wear on the bone temperature rise through the internal gas cooling method via CO2 and to reduce the risk of incidence of thermal necrosis. To this end, drilling tests were conducted at three rotational speeds 1000, 2000, and 3000 r·min-1 in two states of without cooling and with internal gas cooling by CO2 through an internal coolant carbide drill bit, along with six drill bit states (new, used 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 times) on a bovine femur bone. The results indicated that in the internal gas cooling state, as the number of drill bit applications increased from the new state to more than 50 times, the temperature of the hole site increased on average by ΔT = 2-3 °C (n = 1000 r·min-1), ΔT = 5-8 °C (n = 2000 r·min-1), and ΔT = 5-7 °C (n = 3000 r·min-1). Furthermore, the internal gas cooling method was able to significantly reduce the effect of the drill bit wear on the temperature rise of the drilling site and to resolve the risk of incidence of thermal necrosis regardless of the process parameters for drilling operations.
期刊介绍:
Advances in Production Engineering & Management (APEM journal) is an interdisciplinary international academic journal published quarterly. The main goal of the APEM journal is to present original, high quality, theoretical and application-oriented research developments in all areas of production engineering and production management to a broad audience of academics and practitioners. In order to bridge the gap between theory and practice, applications based on advanced theory and case studies are particularly welcome. For theoretical papers, their originality and research contributions are the main factors in the evaluation process. General approaches, formalisms, algorithms or techniques should be illustrated with significant applications that demonstrate their applicability to real-world problems. Please note the APEM journal is not intended especially for studying problems in the finance, economics, business, and bank sectors even though the methodology in the paper is quality/project management oriented. Therefore, the papers should include a substantial level of engineering issues in the field of manufacturing engineering.