A comparative study of the cytotoxicity and corrosion resistance of nickel-titanium and titanium-niobium shape memory alloys

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Rebecca E. McMahon
  • Ji Ma
  • Stanislav V. Verkhoturov
  • Dany Munoz-Pinto
  • Ibrahim Karaman
  • Felix Rubitschek
  • Hans J. Maier
  • Mariah S. Hahn

Externe Organisationen

  • Texas A and M University
  • Universität Paderborn
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)2863-2870
Seitenumfang8
FachzeitschriftActa biomaterialia
Jahrgang8
Ausgabenummer7
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 27 März 2012
Extern publiziertJa

Abstract

Nickel-titanium (NiTi) shape memory alloys (SMAs) are commonly used in a range of biomedical applications. However, concerns exist regarding their use in certain biomedical scenarios due to the known toxicity of Ni and conflicting reports of NiTi corrosion resistance, particularly under dynamic loading. Titanium-niobium (TiNb) SMAs have recently been proposed as an alternative to NiTi SMAs due to the biocompatibility of both constituents, the ability of both Ti and Nb to form protective surface oxides, and their superior workability. However, several properties critical to the use of TiNb SMAs in biomedical applications have not been systematically explored in comparison with NiTi SMAs. These properties include cytocompatibility, corrosion resistance, and alterations in alloy surface composition in response to prolonged exposure to physiological solutions. Therefore, the goal of the present work was to comparatively investigate these aspects of NiTi (49.2 at.% Ti) and TiNb (26 at.% Nb) SMAs. The results from the current studies indicate that TiNb SMAs are less cytotoxic than NiTi SMAs, at least under static culture conditions. This increased TiNb cytocompatibility was correlated with reduced ion release as well as with increased corrosion resistance according to potentio-dynamic tests. Measurements of the surface composition of samples exposed to cell culture medium further supported the reduced ion release observed from TiNb relative to NiTi SMAs. Alloy composition depth profiles also suggested the formation of calcium phosphate deposits within the surface oxide layers of medium-exposed NiTi but not of TiNb. Collectively, the present results indicate that TiNb SMAs may be promising alternatives to NiTi for certain biomedical applications.

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A comparative study of the cytotoxicity and corrosion resistance of nickel-titanium and titanium-niobium shape memory alloys. / McMahon, Rebecca E.; Ma, Ji; Verkhoturov, Stanislav V. et al.
in: Acta biomaterialia, Jahrgang 8, Nr. 7, 27.03.2012, S. 2863-2870.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

McMahon RE, Ma J, Verkhoturov SV, Munoz-Pinto D, Karaman I, Rubitschek F et al. A comparative study of the cytotoxicity and corrosion resistance of nickel-titanium and titanium-niobium shape memory alloys. Acta biomaterialia. 2012 Mär 27;8(7):2863-2870. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2012.03.034
McMahon, Rebecca E. ; Ma, Ji ; Verkhoturov, Stanislav V. et al. / A comparative study of the cytotoxicity and corrosion resistance of nickel-titanium and titanium-niobium shape memory alloys. in: Acta biomaterialia. 2012 ; Jahrgang 8, Nr. 7. S. 2863-2870.
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title = "A comparative study of the cytotoxicity and corrosion resistance of nickel-titanium and titanium-niobium shape memory alloys",
abstract = "Nickel-titanium (NiTi) shape memory alloys (SMAs) are commonly used in a range of biomedical applications. However, concerns exist regarding their use in certain biomedical scenarios due to the known toxicity of Ni and conflicting reports of NiTi corrosion resistance, particularly under dynamic loading. Titanium-niobium (TiNb) SMAs have recently been proposed as an alternative to NiTi SMAs due to the biocompatibility of both constituents, the ability of both Ti and Nb to form protective surface oxides, and their superior workability. However, several properties critical to the use of TiNb SMAs in biomedical applications have not been systematically explored in comparison with NiTi SMAs. These properties include cytocompatibility, corrosion resistance, and alterations in alloy surface composition in response to prolonged exposure to physiological solutions. Therefore, the goal of the present work was to comparatively investigate these aspects of NiTi (49.2 at.% Ti) and TiNb (26 at.% Nb) SMAs. The results from the current studies indicate that TiNb SMAs are less cytotoxic than NiTi SMAs, at least under static culture conditions. This increased TiNb cytocompatibility was correlated with reduced ion release as well as with increased corrosion resistance according to potentio-dynamic tests. Measurements of the surface composition of samples exposed to cell culture medium further supported the reduced ion release observed from TiNb relative to NiTi SMAs. Alloy composition depth profiles also suggested the formation of calcium phosphate deposits within the surface oxide layers of medium-exposed NiTi but not of TiNb. Collectively, the present results indicate that TiNb SMAs may be promising alternatives to NiTi for certain biomedical applications.",
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note = "Funding information: I.K. and M.S.H. would like to acknowledge support by the NSF CBET (Grant 0731133). We would also like to acknowledge the critical review of the manuscript data and text by Silvia Becerra-Bayona and Viviana Guiza-Arguello.",
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Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparative study of the cytotoxicity and corrosion resistance of nickel-titanium and titanium-niobium shape memory alloys

AU - McMahon, Rebecca E.

AU - Ma, Ji

AU - Verkhoturov, Stanislav V.

AU - Munoz-Pinto, Dany

AU - Karaman, Ibrahim

AU - Rubitschek, Felix

AU - Maier, Hans J.

AU - Hahn, Mariah S.

N1 - Funding information: I.K. and M.S.H. would like to acknowledge support by the NSF CBET (Grant 0731133). We would also like to acknowledge the critical review of the manuscript data and text by Silvia Becerra-Bayona and Viviana Guiza-Arguello.

PY - 2012/3/27

Y1 - 2012/3/27

N2 - Nickel-titanium (NiTi) shape memory alloys (SMAs) are commonly used in a range of biomedical applications. However, concerns exist regarding their use in certain biomedical scenarios due to the known toxicity of Ni and conflicting reports of NiTi corrosion resistance, particularly under dynamic loading. Titanium-niobium (TiNb) SMAs have recently been proposed as an alternative to NiTi SMAs due to the biocompatibility of both constituents, the ability of both Ti and Nb to form protective surface oxides, and their superior workability. However, several properties critical to the use of TiNb SMAs in biomedical applications have not been systematically explored in comparison with NiTi SMAs. These properties include cytocompatibility, corrosion resistance, and alterations in alloy surface composition in response to prolonged exposure to physiological solutions. Therefore, the goal of the present work was to comparatively investigate these aspects of NiTi (49.2 at.% Ti) and TiNb (26 at.% Nb) SMAs. The results from the current studies indicate that TiNb SMAs are less cytotoxic than NiTi SMAs, at least under static culture conditions. This increased TiNb cytocompatibility was correlated with reduced ion release as well as with increased corrosion resistance according to potentio-dynamic tests. Measurements of the surface composition of samples exposed to cell culture medium further supported the reduced ion release observed from TiNb relative to NiTi SMAs. Alloy composition depth profiles also suggested the formation of calcium phosphate deposits within the surface oxide layers of medium-exposed NiTi but not of TiNb. Collectively, the present results indicate that TiNb SMAs may be promising alternatives to NiTi for certain biomedical applications.

AB - Nickel-titanium (NiTi) shape memory alloys (SMAs) are commonly used in a range of biomedical applications. However, concerns exist regarding their use in certain biomedical scenarios due to the known toxicity of Ni and conflicting reports of NiTi corrosion resistance, particularly under dynamic loading. Titanium-niobium (TiNb) SMAs have recently been proposed as an alternative to NiTi SMAs due to the biocompatibility of both constituents, the ability of both Ti and Nb to form protective surface oxides, and their superior workability. However, several properties critical to the use of TiNb SMAs in biomedical applications have not been systematically explored in comparison with NiTi SMAs. These properties include cytocompatibility, corrosion resistance, and alterations in alloy surface composition in response to prolonged exposure to physiological solutions. Therefore, the goal of the present work was to comparatively investigate these aspects of NiTi (49.2 at.% Ti) and TiNb (26 at.% Nb) SMAs. The results from the current studies indicate that TiNb SMAs are less cytotoxic than NiTi SMAs, at least under static culture conditions. This increased TiNb cytocompatibility was correlated with reduced ion release as well as with increased corrosion resistance according to potentio-dynamic tests. Measurements of the surface composition of samples exposed to cell culture medium further supported the reduced ion release observed from TiNb relative to NiTi SMAs. Alloy composition depth profiles also suggested the formation of calcium phosphate deposits within the surface oxide layers of medium-exposed NiTi but not of TiNb. Collectively, the present results indicate that TiNb SMAs may be promising alternatives to NiTi for certain biomedical applications.

KW - Corrosion resistance

KW - Cytotoxicity

KW - NiTi

KW - Shape memory alloys

KW - TiNb

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U2 - 10.1016/j.actbio.2012.03.034

DO - 10.1016/j.actbio.2012.03.034

M3 - Article

C2 - 22465573

AN - SCOPUS:84861636481

VL - 8

SP - 2863

EP - 2870

JO - Acta biomaterialia

JF - Acta biomaterialia

SN - 1742-7061

IS - 7

ER -

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