ORCID Profile
0000-0002-9674-5503
Current Organisation
University of Tokyo
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Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/J.ACTBIO.2016.09.012
Abstract: In this paper, we present further work on the influence of minor additions of Ru to the Ti-20Nb alloy system, with a primary focus on mechanical properties of the as-cast material, along with microstructural response to elevated temperatures. Findings include high as-cast strengths and admissible strain values, up to 920MPa and 1.5% respectively, along with moduli down to approximately 65GPa in the as-cast state. Together with a significant increase in cell proliferation under MTS assay relative to controls, this indicates the chosen alloy system has significant promise for application in porous orthopaedic biomaterials, in particular those alloys with 0.5-1.0% Ru are deemed most suitable. Given their promise, preliminary investigation of the alloy system's response to thermal treatment was also undertaken. The presented research, an investigation into the mechanical properties and response to thermal treatments of Ru-containing Ti-20Nb-base alloys, holds significance in the field of metallic biomaterials due to the heretofore limited investigation into the impact of Ru on the properties of biomedical, β-phase, Ti-based alloys. Given Ru's known beneficial impact on corrosion resistance, experimental confirmation of the impact of addition on mechanical properties was needed that suitable mechanical properties, including yield strengths up to ∼930MPa along with elastic admissible strains approaching 1.5%, were achieved is both promising in and of itself, and of significant note for further research into the field. Preliminary thermal and cell-proliferation studies are additionally provided to inform further studies.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 10-2008
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 12-2008
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 07-2014
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 03-2016
DOI: 10.1016/J.ACTBIO.2015.12.010
Abstract: In this study, a Ti-(Ta,Nb)-Fe system was investigated with aims toward the development of high strength, biocompatible titanium alloy suitable for the development of porous orthopedic biomaterials with minimal processing. Notable findings include yield strengths of 740, 1250 and 1360 MPa for the Ti-12Nb-5Fe, Ti-7Ta-5Fe and Ti-10Ta-4Fe alloys, respectively, with elastic moduli comparable to existing Ti-alloys, yielding admissible strains of 0.9 ± 0.3, 1.2 ± 0.2 and 1.13 ± 0.02% for the Ti-12Nb-5Fe, Ti-7Ta-5Fe and Ti-10Ta-4Fe alloys, respectively more than twice that of human bone. Observed microstructure varied significantly depending on alloy near pure β-phase was seen in Ti-12Nb-5Fe, β with some ω precipitation in Ti-10Ta-4Fe, and a duplex α+β structure was observed throughout the Ti-7Ta-5Fe. In addition to suitable mechanical parameters, all investigated alloys exhibited promising corrosion potentials on the order of -0.24 V SCE, equalling that seen for a C.P.-Ti control at -0.25V SCE, and substantially more noble than that seen for Ti-6Al-4V. Electrochemical corrosion rates of 0.5-3 μm/year were likewise seen to agree well with that measured for C.P.-Ti. Further, no statistically significant difference could be seen between any of the alloys relative to a C.P.-Ti control regards to cell proliferation, as investigated via MTS assay and confocal microscopy. As such, the combination of high admissible strain and low corrosion indicate all investigated alloys show significant promise as potential porous biomaterials while in the as-cast state, with the Ti-10Ta-4Fe alloy identified as the most promising composition investigated. The findings of this paper are of significance to the field of metallic biomaterials as they detail the development of alloys of satisfactory biocompatibility and electrochemical behaviour, that furthermore display exceptional mechanical properties. Notably, both extremely high compressive yield strengths and admissible strains, up to 1.36 GPa and 1.2% respectively, are reported, exceeding or rivalling that seen in traditional alloys such as Ti-6Al-4V, which typically displays compressive yield strengths and admissible strains on the order of 895 MPa and 0.81% respectively, as well as modern alloys such as Gum Metal or TNZT. That this is achieved in the absence of thermomechanical processing represents a significant and novel outcome of substantial benefit for application as a porous biomaterial.
No related grants have been discovered for Yoko Yamabe-Mitarai.