Abstract
This paper investigates the fatigue performance of Nitinol thin-film devices used in medical applications. Freestanding films are fabricated and structured by microsystem technology processes (magnetron sputtering, UV lithography and wet chemical etching). A test rig is developed to address the requirements of Nitinol thin-film samples in terms of force, stroke and precision and also allows the multiplication of test rigs due to its inexpensive components. Hence, several samples can be tested simultaneously at different parameters in order to obtain a thorough characterization within reasonable test duration. Finite element analysis (FEA) is used to derive maximum principle strains of test specimen during cycling loading. Therefore, a superelastic, multiaxial material model with two different kinetic transformation mechanisms being capable of considering tension/compression asymmetry and temperature effects is realized and implemented using the FEA software Comsol Multiphysics. Good agreement between simulation and experimental tensile tests is shown. An excellent fatigue resistance with a high fatigue safety limit of 1.75% pulsatile strain amplitude for mean strains up to 2.5% with sputtered Nitinol diamond specimen is observed.
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Introduction
Nitinol is without a doubt a material with fascinating properties. Its martensitic transformation enables the reversible accommodation of strains in the range of several percents, for either spring or actuator applications, and is the underlying mechanism to superelasticity and the shape memory effect (Ref 1). Besides academic interest, it is also one of the most important materials in the medical field, in particular for devices or implants that can be deployed in a minimal-invasive manner. Its most prominent application is the stent, which is used for the treatment for vascular diseases, e.g., stenosis, to avoid stroke, carotid artery disease (CAD), peripheral artery disease (PAD), etc. (Ref 2, 3). A crucial parameter for vascular devices is their material fatigue due to the pulsatile movement of the vessels during the device operation. The literature is rich on fatigue tests and theoretical predictions for Nitinol fatigue (Ref 4,5,6,7,8,9). Major factors influencing the fatigue life of Nitinol are the material impurity level (in particular, the size of oxide and carbide inclusion) (Ref 10), working temperature (difference between martensitic transformation temperature and test temperature) (Ref 11, 12) and microstructural aspects (grain size, amount, size and distribution of Ni4Ti3 precipitates). The performance of the Nitinol alloy at specific test parameters can be presented in a kind of Wöhler diagram, from which the materials safety limit can be derived. For standard Nitinol (processed by laser cutting or braiding) (Ref 6), the safety limit is in the range of 0.5-0.6%, for a large interval of mean strains (Ref 13). Most often, diamond-shape specimen resembling a single stent cell or Nitinol wires are used for fatigue testing of Nitinol. Due to the geometric complexity of these subcomponents, FEA simulations are necessary to calculate the dynamic mechanical behavior.
A Nitinol fabrication route based on microsystem technology (MST) processes is used (Ref 14), offering novel design freedom with a very pure Nitinol alloy. For instance, it enables the fabrication of miniaturized Nitinol devices with highly complex geometries (e.g., devices with complex topographical features: Nitinol stents with drug reservoirs, cavities or interface features, thin Nitinol meshes with a few micrometer mesh sizes for tissue engineering), devices with integrated functionality (e.g., Nitinol stent structures equipped with Pt, PtIr or IrOx electrodes for bioelectric sensing or stimulation, devices with a large number of Ta markers), etc. (Ref 15,16,17). Hence, numerous next-generation medical devices can be envisioned. However, the fatigue properties of these devices and material systems need to be considered and tested. Also, the microstructure of these sputtered Nitinol devices differs in a way that oxide and carbide inclusions are lacking, and no cold work is required to structure and shape these devices. These features promise much improved fatigue properties, and a first study on thin-film Nitinol showed a significantly higher safety limit of 1.5% (Ref 18) in alternating strain. In addition, new alloys such as ultralow fatigue shape memory materials from TiNiCu (Ref 19) and TiNiCuCo (Ref 20) can be easily fabricated, structured and shape set using the MST processes.
The parameter set for fatigue tests includes different strain amplitudes and mean strains, and each data point requires multiple samples to increase statistical significance. Disregarding test parameters of the alloy itself (purity, microstructure, chemical composition, transformation temperature), additional external test parameters can be test temperature, test frequency, testing media (air, air-cooled, water, PBS, oil, etc.). This leads to a high number of samples required for a meaningful fatigue test. Typically, Nitinol shape memory alloys are tested at 20 Hz, a compromise between experiment duration and the detrimental effects that occur due to self-heating and -cooling during the martensitic transformation, i.e., the increase in stress plateau slope (Ref 21). At 20 Hz, a typical test run-out of 100 Mio. cycles required for FDA approval, which corresponds to almost three years in operation only, takes almost 60 days. Given the high number of samples to test, strategies are required to decrease the overall testing time. Obviously, multisample holders for testing several samples simultaneously at the same parameter set and multiple test rigs for different parameter sets can be used. The requirements for fatigue tests of Nitinol thin-film specimen of different shapes are, however, quite demanding: The amplitude of the cyclic movement needs to be precise within ± 5 µm for amplitudes between ~ 80 µm and ~ 500 µm, and forces vary for different sample shapes between a few milli-Newton for diamond-shape specimen to a few tens of Newton for full material. Piezoelectric actuators offer such high-precision movement, but both high amplitudes and high forces are challenging for this actuator class. In addition, tests need to be conducted at body temperature, preferably in biologic liquid to simulate the operating environment of the final device. Commercially available, elaborate fatigue testing machines that fulfill these requirements require a high budget and cannot be multiplied easily in order to test different parameters simultaneously.
Therefore, the scope of this work was the development of an accurate, simple and economically scalable high-cycle fatigue testing rig for thin-film Nitinol-based specimen. These are fundamental to test and evaluate the performance of different final devices that can be fabricated by the described MST process (e.g., different materials, material stack, geometry variations, heat treatments, etc.). In contrast to previous results presented in (Ref 18), we determine the fatigue behavior of sputtered Nitinol thin-film devices for an increased number of 10 Mio. pulsatile cycles and a large number of mean strain/strain amplitude combinations, which has not yet been reported in this detail yet, and are able to do so for other more complex final devices in the future. It also allows for a significant comparison to studies on Nitinol fabricated by other methods. In order to derive strain amplitudes from the absolute displacement of the sputtered diamond-shape specimen, a FEA model was implemented in Comsol to account for sputtered Nitinol material parameters. The FEA model also allows to calculate principle strains in sputtered Nitinol for more complex 3D geometries.
Experiment
Fatigue Test Rig
The fatigue testing rig developed in this work is sketched in Fig. 1. Its basic working principle is the spring/mass system. Two springs are compressed by a deadweight of specific mass. The deadweight is connected downward to the upper clamping jaw, and the lower clamping jaw is initially fixed. Hence, the spring/mass system has a resonant frequency that is determined by the spring constants, the mass of the deadweight and the elasticity of the sample at a given preload. For diamond-shape specimen which is highly flexible and which exhibits low tensile or compressive forces, the system is mainly determined by the mass and the spring constants. Mass and spring constants are chosen so that the systems’ resonant frequency is 20 Hz.
The system is actuated using a voice coil actuator (ACCEL, VLR0033-0099-00A). A rectangular signal is used to drive the voice coil actuator and excite the system at its resonant frequency. During a period of T/2, the signal at the voice coil is high and low, respectively. The absolute values of the high and low signal determine the amplitude of the oscillation, and the mean strain can also be adjusted within a limited range. The amplitude is controlled by a PID control implemented on an Arduino Due microcontroller. The mean strain is controlled by incremental/decremental steps after each period. The movement is measured using an analog inductive sensor (IFM, IF6029), whose signal is fed to one of the Arduino’s analog input ports.
The system has several benefits: In resonance, the movement is almost perfectly sinusoidal, which is important for the comparison with results of other studies. An amplitude stability of ± 5% (of the nominal amplitude) can be reached. The voice coil actuator requires low power, generates no obvious heat and is cheap.
However, some issues that occur during fatigue testing of Nitinol need to be addressed: During cycling at a given initial mean strain, the effective elastic modulus of the material changes, influencing the resonant frequency of the system. Additionally, when stress levels drop during cycling, the mean strain increases due to the use of the spring/mass principle, which is force controlled rather than strain controlled. The effect of resonant frequency change can be handled by changing the excitation amplitude accordingly, which can be implemented in the Arduino C++ code. However, while testing 30-µm-thick full material, the resonant frequency remains stable within 0.2 Hz, so that the change in excitation amplitude to keep the oscillation constant is rather small. The effect of increasing mean strain, however, requires additional measures, since it cannot be purely accommodated by changing the values of the voice coils high and low signal. We added a linear motor to the system, which changes the position of the lower clamping jaw, so that the mean distance between upper and lower clamping jaw remains constant throughout the experiment.
The test rig was constructed so that samples could be placed within a temperature-controlled deionized water basin with a constant temperature at 37 °C.
Experimental Procedure
For fatigue and tensile tests, samples fabricated by the previously described MST methods were used. Dogbone specimen as shown in Fig. 2 (left) with a parallel length of 13 mm × 0.5 mm is used in tensile tests to determine the material parameters experimentally used in the FEA simulations. The so-called diamond-shape specimen as shown in Fig. 2 (left) is used in tensile tests for the validation of the FEA simulations and the determination of the high-cycle fatigue behavior. After fabrication, the diamond specimen was surface treated. The SEM image in Fig. 2 (right) shows a typical resulting surface of a Nitinol strut. Both dogbone and diamond specimens have a thickness of 50 µm.
Finite Element Formulation and Analysis
To calculate mean strain and strain amplitude of the diamond specimen under various pulsatile loading conditions, a multiaxial SMA material model was implemented into the FEA software Comsol Multiphysics. The main principle was adapted from Thiebaud et al. (Ref 22, 23), and the interactions between the different modules are visualized in Fig. 3.
Structural Mechanics
Two structural mechanics modules \(\widetilde{SM}\) (linear resolution) and \(SM\) (nonlinear resolution) are used whereupon the evolution law
is solved in the linear module \(\widetilde{SM}\) with \(\rho\) the density, \(\underline{{\widetilde{\sigma }}}\) the stress tensor and the displacement vector \(\widetilde{\varvec{u}}\). Here, stress and strain are connected by the linear constitutive relation
with the linearized small strain tensor \(\underline{{\widetilde{\varepsilon }}}_{{(\widetilde{\varvec{u}})}}\) and the isotropic stiffness tensor \(\underline{\underline{{\tilde{C}}}}\) assuming a constant Poisson ratio and a constant phase-averaged Young’s modulus
of the reciprocal martensite and austenite Young’s moduli EM and EA. These are determined experimentally from the linear parts of the dogbone specimens’ stress–strain relation in Fig. 5 where the martensite transformation has not started or has been completely finished, respectively. The result of the linear structural mechanics module \(\widetilde{SM}\) is used for the construction of the components \(\widetilde{K}_{ij}\) of the eigenstrain tensor \(\widetilde{{\underline{K} }}\) defined as
with \(\varepsilon_{\text{Tr}}\) the transformation strain, the normalized stress tensor \(\widetilde{{\underline{N} }}\), \(\underline{I}\) the tensor identity and the function f to describe tension–compression asymmetry. Therefore, the transformation strain is found to be reasonably constant below austenite finish temperature Af (Ref 24) and decreases with rising temperature T and is thus defined as follows:
with \(\varepsilon_{{{\text{Tr}},\hbox{max} }}\) the transformation strain and \(\varepsilon_{\text{red}}\) the transformation strain reduction factor.
The asymmetry function is chosen as
with a the asymmetry factor. The quantity \(\widetilde{y}_{0}\) and the tensor \(\widetilde{{\underline{N} }}\) are chosen as
with \(\widetilde{{\overline{\sigma } }}\) the Von Mises stress. The resulting eigenstrain tensor \(\widetilde{{\underline{K} }}\) from the linear solid mechanics module \(\widetilde{SM}\) is coupled to the constitutive relation
of the nonlinear solid mechanics module \(SM\). Here, the phase-averaged Young’s modulus
of the reciprocal martensite and austenite Young’s moduli \(E_{\text{M}}\) and \(E_{\text{A}}\) is defined as a function of the local martensite fraction \(\xi_{\text{M}}\) and austenite fraction \(\xi_{\text{A}} = 1 - \xi_{\text{M}}\). The structural mechanics modules \(\widetilde{SM}\) and \(SM\) are solved for identical geometry and boundary conditions. In contrast to (Ref 22, 23), we have used the Green strain tensor (Ref 25) \(\underline{E}_{{\left( \varvec{u} \right)}}\) and its quadratic components \(\underline{q}_{{\left( \varvec{u} \right)}}\), respectively, to allow for large geometric deformations. The difference between the results using the linearized small strain tensor \(\underline{\varepsilon }_{{\left( {\widetilde{\varvec{u}}} \right)}}\) and the Green strain tensor \(\underline{E}_{{\left( \varvec{u} \right)}}\) is shown in Fig. 7. A much improved approximation between tensile and compression measurements of diamond specimen and corresponding FEA results is obtained using the Green strain tensor. Both structural mechanics modules are implemented for 2D problems with plane stress assumptions neglecting possible out-of-plane movement of the diamond specimen under compression.
Kinetic Transformation
The kinetic transformation from martensite to austenite is calculated in an additional partial differential equation (PDE) module. Therefore, the equivalent stress \(\sigma_{\text{eq}}\) defined as follows:
is provided by the nonlinear structural mechanics module to calculate the transformation rates with respect to the tension–compression asymmetry. In contrast to the transformation law presented in Ref 22, 23, we have implemented two different constitutive transformation laws originated by Brinson (Ref 24, 26) (BRI) and Müller–Achenbach–Seelecke (Ref 27,28,29) (MAS). Figure 4 schematically illustrates the critical stresses of the transformation paths for pseudoelastic material behavior from austenite to detwinned martensite (A → M) and back from detwinned martensite to austenite (M → A) as a function of temperature. The critical start and finish stresses \(\sigma_{\text{cr,s}}\) and \(\sigma_{\text{cr,f}}\), the martensite and austenite start and finish temperatures \(T_{\text{Ms}}\), \(T_{\text{Mf}}\), \(T_{\text{As}}\) and \(T_{\text{Af}}\) and the Clausius–Clapeyron coefficients \(C_{\text{AM}}\) and \(C_{\text{MA}}\) used for the FEA are experimentally determined by tensile tests of dogbone specimen at different temperatures and additional DSC measurements. The resulting material parameters are summarized in Table 1.
Transformation: Brinson (BRI)
The uniaxial transformation law and its activation condition presented by Brinson et al. (Ref 24) are
for the transformation from detwinned martensite to austenite and
for the transformation from austenite to detwinned martensite, respectively. Here, \(\xi_{{{\text{MA}}0}}\) and \(\xi_{{{\text{AM}}0}}\) are the initial or reinitial values of the transformation processes and described according to the following equations:
for the transformation from detwinned martensite to austenite and
for the transformation from austenite to detwinned martensite, respectively. In the PDE module, the evolution law
is solved at which the activation conditions are implemented as Boolean expressions.
Transformation: Müller–Achenbach–Seelecke (MAS)
For the implementation of the MAS transformation law, we used the approximative formulas
presented by Wendler et al. (Ref 29) with \(V_{\text{D}}\) the transforming layer volume, \(k_{\text{B}}\) the Boltzmann constant and \(\tau\) the relaxation time constant which represent the original formulations very well and accelerate the numerical computation. For the critical transformation stresses \(\sigma^{\text{MA}}\) and \(\sigma^{\text{AM}}\), we choose the mean values between start and finish temperatures \(T_{\text{As}}\) and \(T_{\text{Af}}\) and critical start and finish stresses \(\sigma_{\text{cr,s}}\) and \(\sigma_{\text{cr,f}}\), respectively, as follows:
In the PDE module, the evolution law
is solved for the MAS transformation at which the activation conditions are again implemented as Boolean expressions.
Temperature Evolution
Ambient temperatures and heat flow effects can by examined by the temperature module solving the heat equation
with \(\rho\) the density, \(c_{\text{p}}\) the heat capacity and the thermal conductivity \(k_{{\left( {\xi_{\text{M}} ,\xi_{\text{A}} } \right)}}\) defined as the reciprocal phase average
of the phase-dependent thermal conductivities \(k_{\text{M}}\) and \(k_{\text{A}}\) for martensite and austenite, respectively. Self-heating and self-cooling of the material due to the phase transformation can be included in the heat equation using a heating source defined as
with the transformation enthalpy \(\Delta h_{{\left( {\sigma_{\text{eq}} } \right)}}^{\text{AM}}\). The transformation enthalpy considering the standard latent heat of entropic origin and stress-dependent contributions is given by (Ref 29, 30):
with L the latent heat. Nevertheless, the temperature variations due to the kinetic transformations are neglected in the following simulations, and thus an isothermal behavior (T = T0) is considered.
Experimental Validation
In this section, we validate the model implementation by comparing simulation results with corresponding experimental results. At first, we consider the results of the uniaxial tensile tests which we have used to determine the material parameters relevant to the phase transformation as mentioned before. The resulting stress–strain behavior of the dogbone specimen is shown in Fig. 5 for ambient temperatures of T = 22 °C (left) and T = 37 °C (right). The simulation results using both the BRI and MAS transformation laws show nearly identical pseudoelastic behavior corresponding well with the measurements. However, the plateau slope using MAS transformation law is flat, in contrast to a slight slope which depends on the critical start and finish stress values used in the BRI transformation law.
Next, we use the finite element model with the MAS transformation law and the verified material parameters to predict the superelastic material behavior of sputtered diamond specimen. The result of the stress distribution at a temperature of T = 22 °C in the strut close to the apex of the diamond specimen under tensile and compressive displacement of 400 µm in y direction is shown in Fig. 6 (left). Under tensile displacement, the stresses’ x-component \(\sigma_{x}\) is negative (compression) at the outer edges of the strut, positive (tension) at the inner edges and vice versa if a compressive displacement in y direction is applied to the diamond specimen as shown in the upper part of Fig. 6 (left). The resulting martensite fraction is shown in the upper part of Fig. 6 (right). It is clearly seen that locations where high stresses \(\sigma_{x}\) occur correspond well with the locations where the martensitic transformation occurs. The same applies for the stresses’ y-component \(\sigma_{y}\) in the bottom part of Fig. 6 (left) leading to the martensitic transformation at the inner edge of the apex in the upper part of Fig. 6 (right). Hence, the model is able to handle true multiaxial loadings, and all tensor stress components (normal and shear components) are used to determine the characteristics of the martensitic transformation, i.e., amount of transformed material and direction of transformation. Also the influence of the included tension/compression asymmetry is visible in the upper part of Fig. 6 (right). Areas where the martensitic transformation is originated by tensile stress are slightly larger compared to the areas where the martensitic transformation is originated by compressive stress. A good agreement is also observed in the local appearance of martensite comparing FEA results and polarization microscope images shown in the lower part of Fig. 6 (right). Martensitic regions can be distinguished by their higher surface roughness in contrast to the regions where the material is still austenitic.
Experimental and simulation results of tensile tests using the diamond specimen are shown in Fig. 7 for temperatures of T = 22 °C (left) and T = 37 °C (right). As mentioned earlier, one can clearly see that the use of the small strain tensor \(\underline{\varepsilon }_{{\left( {\widetilde{\varvec{u}}} \right)}}\) (dashed lines) leads to a distinction between experimental results and simulation, and thus the use of the Green strain tensor \(\underline{E}_{{\left( \varvec{u} \right)}}\) to account for large deformations is mandatory, especially if tensile displacement is applied to the diamond specimen. While FEA results show a slightly different behavior during the release of the load at T = 22 °C, the agreement with the experimental results at T = 37 °C is excellent, in particular for MAS transformation law. Therefore, we choose this transformation law to determine the mean strain and strain amplitude values for testing the fatigue behavior of the diamond specimen in the following, as shown in the next section.
According to the experimental procedure, where diamond specimens are subject to cyclic oscillation after a compressive displacement, we performed FEA on these specimens in various minor loop scenarios. Figure 8 shows the total force as a function of the displacement for a mean displacement of 300 µm in compression and oscillations with displacement amplitudes of 50 µm (left, 100 µm peak-to-peak), 100 µm (middle, 200 µm peak-to-peak) and 150 µm (right, 300 µm peak-to-peak) at T = 37 °C. The experimental results and the FEA results are in good agreement. The oscillation frequency and thus the strain rate are limited in the experimental results by the tensile testing machine (v = 1 mm/s) and significantly lower in comparison with the fatigue setup. The shape of the minor loops is comparable and in good agreement with the FEA results with an oscillation frequency of 1 Hz. By using a higher oscillation frequency of 20 Hz, the slope in the minor loop is clearly increased for larger amplitudes due to the higher resulting strain rates. In compression, the maximum principal strain occurs typically close to the apex at the outer edges of the struts or at the inner edges close to the grip. The peak-to-peak values of these local maximum first principal strain during one period of the oscillation (f = 20 Hz) are finally used to determine the strain amplitude and the mean strain values. Here, a mean strain/strain amplitude of 2.70%/0.48% is determined for a displacement amplitude of 50 µm, 2.74%/1.29% for displacement amplitudes of 100 µm and 2.68%/1.79% for a displacement amplitude of 150 µm with a mean displacement of 300 µm, respectively.
Results and Discussion
The fatigue data of the diamond specimen are plotted as constant life diagram with displacement amplitude as a function of mean displacement in Fig. 9 (left). A total number of 53 diamond specimen were tested with up to 420 µm mean displacement in compression and maximum displacement amplitudes of 250 µm. Therefore, 37 diamond specimen survived 107 pulsatile cycles (open squares) and 16 led to fracture before 107 pulsatile cycles where reached (solid squares). By using the above-described FEA implementation, the corresponding strain conditions are calculated in Fig. 9 (right) resulting in a maximum mean strain up to 4% and a maximum strain amplitude of 2.25%. For the sputtered Nitinol diamond specimen, an alternating strain limit of 1.75% is observed for compressive mean strains below 2.5%. Thus, the alternating strain limit is nearly twice as high compared to the strain limit of conventionally manufactured diamond specimen from standard Nitinol alloys (Ref 13). Furthermore, the strain limit of sputtered Nitinol diamond specimen is also slightly higher compared to the alternating strain limit of diamond specimen manufactured from optimized (limited size and abundance of inclusions) Nitinol alloys. Using commercially available Nitinol tubes of process-optimized (VIM + VAR) and high-purity (VAR) Nitinol alloys for the manufacturing process of the diamond specimen, an amplitude strain limit of 1.5% at 3% mean strain is reported (Ref 4). Inclusion size, area fraction and density which play a pivotal role for fatigue life (Ref 35), are significantly reduced for these optimized alloys, and thus the probability to nucleate a fatigue crack. This leads to lower fracture rates and a higher amplitude strain limit. It is therefore not surprising that the fatigue safety limit of sputtered Nitinol diamond specimen is on a comparable level due to the entire absence of detectable inclusions in sputtered Nitinol (Ref 36). Between 2.0 and 2.5% mean strain, the alternating strain limit drops from 1.5 to 0.8% at 3.5 to 4% mean strain for sputtered Nitinol diamond specimen. Here, the maximum local strain exceeds the end of the superelastic stress plateau of approximately 4% at 37 °C, as seen in Fig. 5 (right). Sputtered Nitinol has an isotropic grain orientation since cold or hot work processes that are used, e.g., for tube manufacturing are not required. In comparison, the larger superelastic stress plateau of 6% for diamond specimen from process-optimized and high-purity tubes might be the reason for these materials reaching test run out at a mean strain of 3%.
Conclusion
We have developed an inexpensive fatigue test rig to perform high-cycle fatigue tests on a large number of Nitinol specimens, both in parallel and at different test parameters. The fatigue test rigs are used determine the fatigue safety limit of ultrapure Nitinol specimen fabricated using microsystem technology, i.e., magnetron sputter deposition. Mean strain and strain amplitudes for the particular diamond specimen are calculated using the FEA software Comsol Multiphysics. A multiaxial SMA material model was implemented with two different kinetic transformation laws, and simulation results show good agreement with the results from tensile tests. The determined fatigue behavior of sputtered Nitinol diamond specimen shows an excellent fatigue resistance with a high fatigue safety limit of 1.75% pulsatile strain amplitude for mean strains below 2.5%.
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Open Access funding provided by Projekt DEAL. This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) through the Research Training Group “Materials4Brain” (GRK 2154).
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Gugat, J.L., Bechtold, C., Chluba, C. et al. High-Cycle Mechanical Fatigue Performance of Sputtered Nitinol. J. of Materi Eng and Perform 29, 1892–1900 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11665-020-04668-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11665-020-04668-2