Bioactive Materials (Apr 2023)

Design of single-phased magnesium alloys with typically high solubility rare earth elements for biomedical applications: Concept and proof

  • Dong Bian,
  • Xiao Chu,
  • Jin Xiao,
  • Zhipei Tong,
  • He Huang,
  • Qinggong Jia,
  • Jianing Liu,
  • Wenting Li,
  • Hui Yu,
  • Yue He,
  • Limin Ma,
  • Xiaolan Wang,
  • Mei Li,
  • Tao Yang,
  • Wenhan Huang,
  • Chi Zhang,
  • Mengyu Yao,
  • Yu Zhang,
  • Zhigang Xu,
  • Shaokang Guan,
  • Yufeng Zheng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
pp. 180 – 200

Abstract

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Rare earth elements (REEs) have been long applied in magnesium alloys, among which the mischmetal-containing WE43 alloy has already got the CE mark approval for clinical application. A considerable amount of REEs (7 wt%) is needed in that multi-phased alloy to achieve a good combination of mechanical strength and corrosion resistance. However, the high complex RE addition accompanied with multiple second phases may bring the concern of biological hazards. Single-phased Mg-RE alloys with simpler compositions were proposed to improve the overall performance, i.e., “Simpler alloy, better performance”. The single-phased microstructure can be successfully obtained with typical high-solubility REEs (Ho, Er or Lu) through traditional smelting, casting and extrusion in a wide compositional range. A good corrosion resistance with a macroscopically uniform corrosion mode was guaranteed by the homogeneously single-phased microstructure. The bimodal-grained structure with plenty of sub-grain microstructures allow us to minimize the RE addition to <1 wt%, without losing mechanical properties. The single-phased Mg-RE alloys show comparable mechanical properties to the clinically-proven Mg-based implants. They exhibited similar in-vitro and in-vivo performances (without local or systematic toxicity in SD-rats) compared to a high purity magnesium. In addition, metal elements in our single-phased alloys can be gradually excreted through the urinary system and digestive system, showing no consistent accumulation of RE in main organs, i.e., less burden on organs. The novel concept in this study focuses on the simplification of Mg-RE based alloys for biomedical purpose, and other biodegradable metals with single-phased microstructures are expected to be explored.

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