Abstract

Bone drilling is an indispensable and demanding operation among many orthopaedic operations. A dedicated drill bit that can achieve low-trauma and self-centring drilling is in urgent need. In this study, a three-step orthopaedic low-traumatic drill bit design was proposed. In order to evaluate the drilling performance of the proposed drill, comprehensive comparison tests were carried out with various commercial medical drills in terms of skiving force, thrust force, temperature rise, and surface quality. The experimental results show that the proposed three-step drill design with the optimal point angle, a small chisel edge, transition arc and web thinning can obtain lower and more stable thrust force, slighter bending force, smaller temperature rise, and higher hole quality compared with the commercial drill bits. The proposed drill shows satisfactory drilling performance and has great application potential in clinical surgery.

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