A novel high-strength and highly corrosive biodegradable Fe-Pd alloy: Structural, mechanical and in vitro corrosion and cytotoxicity study
Language English Country Netherlands Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article
PubMed
28629053
DOI
10.1016/j.msec.2017.05.100
PII: S0928-4931(16)32462-6
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- Keywords
- Biodegradability, Iron, Palladium, Powder Metall., Spark plasma sintering,
- MeSH
- Biocompatible Materials MeSH
- Corrosion MeSH
- Lead MeSH
- Alloys chemistry MeSH
- Materials Testing MeSH
- Weight-Bearing MeSH
- Iron MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Biocompatible Materials MeSH
- Lead MeSH
- Alloys MeSH
- Iron MeSH
Recently, iron-based materials have been considered as candidates for the fabrication of biodegradable load-bearing implants. Alloying with palladium has been found to be a suitable approach to enhance the insufficient corrosion rate of iron-based alloys. In this work, we have extensively compared the microstructure, the mechanical and corrosion properties, and the cytotoxicity of an FePd2 (wt%) alloy prepared by three different routes - casting, mechanical alloying and spark plasma sintering (SPS), and mechanical alloying and the space holder technique (SHT). The properties of the FePd2 (wt%) were compared with pure Fe prepared in the same processes. The preparation route significantly influenced the material properties. Materials prepared by SPS possessed the highest values of mechanical properties (CYS~750-850MPa) and higher corrosion rates than the casted materials. Materials prepared by SHT contained approximately 60% porosity; therefore, their mechanical properties reached the lowest values, and they had the highest corrosion rates, approximately 0.7-1.2mm/a. Highly porous FePd2 was tested in vitro according to the ISO 10993-5 standard using L929 cells, and two-fold diluted extracts showed acceptable cytocompatibility. In general, alloying with Pd enhanced both mechanical properties and corrosion rates and did not decrease the cytocompatibility of the studied materials.
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