Mechanical and physicochemical characterization along with biological interactions of a new Ti25Nb21Hf alloy for bone tissue engineering

Author

Herranz-Diez, Carolina

Gil Mur, Francisco Javier

Guillem Martí, Jordi

Manero Planella, José María

Publication date

2015-03-23



Abstract

Nowadays, one of the main challenges in metal implants for bone substitution is the achievement of an elastic modulus close to that of human cortical bone as well as to provide an adequate interaction with the surrounding tissue avoiding in vivo foreign body reaction. From this perspective, a new Ti-based alloy has been developed with Nb and Hf as alloying elements which are known as non-toxic and with good corrosion properties. The microstructure, mechanical behaviour and the physicochemical properties of this novel titanium alloy have been studied. Relationship of surface chemistry and surface electric charge with protein adsorption and cell adhesion has been evaluated due to its role for understanding the mechanism of biological interactions with tissues. The Ti25Nb21Hf alloy presented a lower elastic modulus than commercial alloys with a superior ultimate strength and yield strength than CP-Ti and very close to Ti6Al4V. It also exhibited good corrosion resistance. Furthermore, the results revealed that it had no cytotoxic effect on rat mesenchymal stem cells and allowed protein adsorption and cell adhesion. The experimental results make this alloy a promising material for bone substitution or for biomedical devices.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

CDU Subject

57 - Biological sciences in general

Subjects and keywords

Cèl·lules; Titani; Proteïnes; Electroquímica; Células; Titanio; Proteínas; Electroquímica; Cells; Titanium; Proteins; Electrochemistry

Pages

31

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Collection

30; 2

Note

The authors would like to thank the Spanish Government for financial support through MAT2012-30706 project co-funded by the EU through European Regional Development Funds and the FI fellowship of the AGAUR Agency. Authors would also like to thank the staff of Fort Wayne Metals for their help with material fabrication and Marc Fernández for corrosion experiments assistance.

Version of

Journal of Biomaterials Applications

Grant Agreement Number

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/6PN/MAT2012-30706

Rights

© 2020 by SAGE Publications

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