Abstract
Cardiovascular stents are commonly made from 316L stainless steel and are deployed within stenosed arterial lesions using balloon expansion. Deployment involves inflating the balloon and plastically deforming the stent until the required diameter is obtained. This plastic deformation induces static stresses in the stent, which will remain for the lifetime of the device. In order to determine these stresses, finite element models of the unit cells of geometrically different, commercially available balloon expandable stents have been created, and deployment and elastic recoil have been simulated. In this work the residual stresses associated with deployment and recoil are compared for the various stent geometries, with a view to establishing appropriate initial stress states for fatigue loading for the stents. The maximum, minimum, and mean stresses induced in the stent due to systolic/diastolic pressure are evaluated, as are performance measures such as radial and longitudinal recoil.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to gratefully acknowledge the financial support provided by Enterprise Ireland under the DESIMS ATRP/02/407 project. E. Donnelly acknowledges Abbott Vascular for the provision of a 2D stent geometry and F. Harewood for the provision of a 3D stent geometry.