Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering (Oct 2021)
A method to determine the accuracy of shape setting thin, spirally shaped Nitinol wires
Abstract
Electric stimulation of the auditory nerve using a cochlear implant (CI) is presumed to be superior when the electrode array (EA) is placed close to the inner wall of the cochlea. Nitinol is investigated as an actuator that enables an intracochlear shape change of the EA from a straight configuration (also necessary for the insertion) to a spiral shape fitting to the inner wall. As shape setting of the thin Nitinol wires is crucial, a method to quantify the accuracy of the shape setting is presented. To measure the trained shape of thin Nitinol wires (ø 100 μm) a contactless, optical method was developed. For each wire, a photomicrograph was captured and processed using a custom Matlab algorithm. Threshold based segmentation followed by morphological operations to remove artefacts were applied to extract the wire’s shape. Utilizing an iterative closest point (ICP) algorithm the actual shape was registered to the desired spiral path. Finally, the root mean squared error describing the deviation between both spirals was calculated as a measure for the “shape error” (εshape). In total 147 Nitinol wires of 16 batches were analyzed to quantify the reliability of the shape setting procedure. The proposed method was successfully applied in all samples. On average εshape was 0.06 ± 0.02 mm. Deviation from the desired shape was < 0.1 mm (< 0.15 mm) in 95% (99%) of the samples. In summary, the presented method is suitable to control the trained shape of thin Nitinol wires. Furthermore, our results confirm a high reliability of the shape setting procedure used for our thin Nitinol actuators intended for future applications in CI EAs.
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