Matrix-plus-Reinforcement and a Bone-like Polymer
- A COMPOSITE material is made of two or more constituents - a continuous MATRIX plus a REINFORCEMENT (fibres or particles) - combined so the result has SUPERIOR properties to either component alone; the body contains natural composites, notably BONE (a composite of collagen, which gives toughness, and hydroxyapatite mineral, which gives stiffness/strength) and tendon.
- PEEK (POLYETHERETHERKETONE) is a semi-crystalline thermoplastic polymer increasingly used in orthopaedic implants because of three favourable properties: an ELASTIC MODULUS (~3-4 GPa) much CLOSER to cortical bone (~18 GPa) than the metals (titanium ~110, stainless steel ~200, cobalt-chrome ~210 GPa); RADIOLUCENCY (it does not obscure radiographs/fusion assessment and produces minimal CT/MRI artefact); and good BIOCOMPATIBILITY, fatigue and chemical/heat resistance.
- Because PEEK's modulus is near that of bone, a PEEK implant transfers more load to the adjacent bone and causes LESS STRESS SHIELDING than a stiff metal implant - stress shielding being the bone resorption (by Wolff's law) that occurs when a stiff implant unloads the bone around it.
- PEEK's main LIMITATION is that it is BIOINERT - it does NOT bond to bone (poor osseointegration) - so it is often SURFACE-MODIFIED (hydroxyapatite or titanium coating, plasma treatment, surface roughening) or made POROUS to encourage bone on-/in-growth; experimental composites add antibacterial or bioactive functionality.
- PEEK can itself be made into a COMPOSITE - CARBON-FIBRE-REINFORCED PEEK (CFR-PEEK) - in which carbon fibres in the PEEK matrix give a tunable, higher strength and a modulus that can be tailored toward bone; CFR-PEEK is used in trauma plates and spinal implants and is also radiolucent.
- Typical orthopaedic USES of PEEK/CFR-PEEK: spinal INTERBODY FUSION CAGES (radiolucent so fusion can be assessed; modulus near bone), TRAUMA PLATES (CFR-PEEK), some arthroplasty components and suture ANCHORS - chosen where radiolucency and reduced stress shielding are advantageous, accepting the need to address its bioinert surface.
- “Composite = matrix + reinforcement (bone = collagen + hydroxyapatite, a natural composite).
- “PEEK: modulus near bone (~4 GPa) -> LESS stress shielding; RADIOLUCENT; biocompatible. Limitation = BIOINERT (poor osseointegration) -> surface coat (HA/Ti) or roughen.
- “Carbon-fibre-reinforced PEEK (CFR-PEEK) = tunable strength + radiolucent; uses: interbody cages, trauma plates, anchors.
Modulus near bone (less stress shielding), radiolucent (imaging/fusion assessment, minimal MRI/CT artefact), biocompatible, fatigue/chemical resistant.
Bioinert - does not bond to bone (poor osseointegration). Addressed by HA/titanium coating, plasma treatment, roughening or porosity.
Composite Materials
A composite combines a continuous matrix with a reinforcement (fibres or particles) so that the combination has better properties than either constituent alone - for example, high strength with a tailored stiffness. The principle is everywhere in the musculoskeletal system: bone is a natural composite of collagen (which provides toughness and tensile strength) and hydroxyapatite mineral (which provides compressive stiffness and strength), and tendon is collagen within a ground-substance matrix. Engineered orthopaedic composites include carbon-fibre-reinforced polymers and glass-fibre composites, where strong fibres in a polymer matrix give high strength-to-weight and tunable modulus. Fibre-reinforced composites are typically anisotropic - their properties depend on direction (strongest along the fibres).

PEEK: Properties, Limitation and Uses
PEEK (polyetheretherketone) is a semi-crystalline thermoplastic with a favourable orthopaedic profile:
- Elastic modulus close to bone (~3-4 GPa vs cortical bone ~18 GPa, far below metals) -> less stress shielding (the bone resorption that follows when a stiff implant unloads adjacent bone, per Wolff's law).
- Radiolucent -> does not obscure radiographs, allows fusion assessment, and gives minimal CT/MRI artefact (an advantage over metal).
- Biocompatible, with good fatigue, wear and chemical/heat resistance. Limitation - BIOINERT: PEEK does not bond to bone (poor osseointegration), so it is commonly surface-modified (hydroxyapatite or titanium coating, plasma treatment, surface roughening) or made porous to encourage bone on-/in-growth; research composites add antibacterial (e.g. metal-ion) or bioactive coatings.
CFR-PEEK (carbon-fibre-reinforced PEEK) is a composite that embeds carbon fibres in the PEEK matrix to give higher, tunable strength and a tailorable modulus while remaining radiolucent. Typical orthopaedic uses of PEEK and CFR-PEEK include spinal interbody fusion cages (radiolucent for fusion assessment, modulus near bone), trauma plates (CFR-PEEK, radiolucent, fatigue-resistant), some arthroplasty components and suture anchors - chosen where radiolucency and reduced stress shielding help, while accepting the need to manage the bioinert surface.
Evidence & Key Studies
Biofunctionalization of 3D-printed PEEK by integrated plasma coating: antimicrobial and bioactive PEEK
- PEEK is widely used in biomedical engineering for its excellent mechanical properties, biocompatibility and radiolucency.
- However, its BIOINERT nature limits infection prevention and bone integration, so surfaces are modified - here with TiO2/Zn coatings that added antimicrobial activity while supporting osteoblast attachment.
- Illustrates both PEEK's advantages and the need for surface modification to overcome its bioinertness.
Enhanced antibacterial activity of copper sulfide/PEEK biocomposites
- PEEK is used for orthopaedic implants, and composites can add functionality - here a CuS/PEEK biocomposite to reduce post-operative infection risk.
- The CuS/PEEK composite achieved over 99.8% antibacterial activity against S. aureus and E. coli (enhanced by light/photothermal effect and copper-ion release).
- Demonstrates the composite strategy of combining PEEK with a reinforcement/additive to gain new properties.
According to PubMed, PEEK's combination of mechanical properties, biocompatibility and radiolucency together with its bioinert limitation (requiring surface modification for bone integration) comes from the cited Phruekthayanon study, and the composite strategy of combining PEEK with an additive to gain function from the cited Pan study. The definition of a composite, bone as a natural collagen-hydroxyapatite composite, PEEK's bone-like modulus reducing stress shielding, and CFR-PEEK applications are standard, well-established biomaterials teaching. (See also our Stress-Strain & Modulus, Stress Shielding, Bone Composition and Ceramics/ Polyethylene topics.)
Clinical Decision Scenarios
Practise clinical reasoning and management decisions out loud
“What is a composite material, and what are the advantages and limitations of PEEK as an orthopaedic implant material?”
“Why is PEEK used for spinal interbody fusion cages, and what is stress shielding?”
Mnemonics & Memory Aids
PEEK
Hook:PEEK: bone-like modulus, easy imaging, biocompatible, but bioinert (Keeps off bone).
COMPOSITE
Hook:Composite = matrix + reinforcement; bone and CFR-PEEK are examples.
Composites
- Matrix + reinforcement -> superior combined properties
- Bone = natural composite (collagen + hydroxyapatite); tendon too
- Fibre-reinforced composites are anisotropic (direction-dependent)
PEEK properties
- Modulus ~3-4 GPa (near bone ~18) -> less stress shielding (vs metals 110-210)
- Radiolucent (fusion assessment, minimal CT/MRI artefact)
- Biocompatible, fatigue/chemical resistant
Limitation & solutions
- Bioinert -> poor osseointegration (does not bond to bone)
- Surface modify: HA/titanium coating, plasma, roughening, porosity
- Composite functionalisation (e.g. antibacterial coatings) - experimental
Uses
- Spinal interbody fusion cages (radiolucent, modulus near bone)
- CFR-PEEK trauma plates (radiolucent, fatigue-resistant)
- Some arthroplasty components and suture anchors