Litcius/Paper detail

Bio-corrosion impacts on mechanical integrity of ZM21 Mg for orthopaedic implant application processed by equal channel angular pressing

S. Prithivirajan, Mayur Bapu Nyahale, Gajanan M. Naik, S. Narendranath, Ashwini Prabhu, P. D. Rekha

2021Journal of Materials Science Materials in Medicine23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The mechanical integrity of rolled ZM21 Mg was improved by equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) to function as a potential biodegradable bone screw implant. Electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) revealed deformed grains of 45 µm observed in rolled ZM21 Mg. They were transformed to equiaxed fine grains of 5.4 µm after 4 th pass ECAP. The yield strength of rolled and ECAPed ZM21 Mg alloys were comparable. In contrast, 4 th pass ZM21 Mg exhibited relatively higher elongation when compared to rolled sample. The mechanical properties of rolled and ECAPed ZM21 Mg were dependant on both grain refinement and crystallographic texture. The rolled and 4 th pass ECAPed tensile samples exhibited nonlinear deterioration of mechanical properties when tested after 7, 14, 21 and 28 days immersion in Hank’s solution. The evaluation signifies that regardless their processing condition, ZM21 Mg alloys are suitable for surgical areas that requires high mechanical strength. In addition, the 4 th pass ECAP samples were viable to MG-63 cells proving themselves to be promising candidates for future in vivo studies.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceEquiaxed crystalsElectron backscatter diffractionUltimate tensile strengthPressingElongationSevere plastic deformationMetallurgyImplantCorrosionTensile testingComposite materialMicrostructureSurgeryMedicineMagnesium Alloys: Properties and ApplicationsAluminum Alloys Composites PropertiesMetal and Thin Film Mechanics