Applicability of existing magnesium alloys as biomedical implant materials

conference paper
Being biocompatible and biodegradable, magnesium alloys are considered as the new generation biomedical implant materials, such as for stents, bone fixtures, plates and screws. A major drawback is the poor chemical stability of metallic magnesium; it corrodes at a pace that is too high for most prospective implant applications. Requirements for biodegradable implants are bio-compatibility, controlled biodegradability and sustainable mechanical properties. Various magnesium alloys containing Al, Zn, Y and rare-earth elements are analyzed in this respect. The alloys are compared on the basis of microstructure, tensile tests and potentio-dynamic polarization tests in simulated body fluid. The effects of semi-solid processing, hot extrusion, heat treatments and sterilization on corrosion resistance and tensile properties are investigated. AZ80 magnesium alloy with certain post-processing treatments fulfills the requirements best as a prospect implant material which has the potential for further improvement by trace alloying additions and surface modifications.
TNO Identifier
242135
ISSN
1545-4150
ISBN
9780873397308
Source title
Magnesium Technology 2009, 15-19 February 2009, San Francisco, CA, USA
Collation
6 p.
Pages
209-214
Files
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