Microstructural, mechanical and electrochemical characterization of TiZrTaHfNb and Ti1.5ZrTa0.5Hf0.5Nb0.5 refractory high-entropy alloys for biomedical applications
Journal article, 2019

The state-of-the-art metallic biomaterials are 316L, CoCrMo and Ti6Al4V but they all suffer from known issues relating to biocompatibility, wear resistance and corrosion resistance. Therefore, there is always the motivation to identify novel superior metallic biomaterials to 316L, CoCrMo and Ti6Al4V. The concept of refractory high-entropy alloys (RHEAs) provides an interesting research direction towards developing novel metallic biomaterials, initially because RHEAs consist of purely biocompatible elements, but a systematic study of the performance of RHEAs targeting biomedical applications, while comparing to that of the state-of-the-art 316L, CoCrMo and Ti6Al4V, was not existing before and constitutes the theme of the current work. Two exemplary RHEAs that are studied in detail in this work, TiZrTaHfNb and Ti1.5ZrTa0.5Hf0.5Nb0.5, show highly promising characteristics as novel superior metallic biomaterials in that they possess a desirable combination of wear resistance, wettability and pitting and general corrosion resistance, outperforming 316L, CoCrMo and Ti6Al4V almost in all these important aspects. In addition, it is also shown in this work that how appropriate alloying in RHEAs can be utilized to fine-tune their performance as better metallic biomaterials, such as the correlation between lattice strain and corrosion resistance.

Biomedical

Microstructure

Corrosion

Nanoindentation

Mechanical properties

High-entropy alloys

Author

Amir Motallebzadeh

Koç University

Naeimeh Sadat Peighambardoust

Koç University

Saad Ahmed Sheikh

National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS)

Hideyuki Murakami

National Institute for Materials Science (NIMS)

Waseda University

Sheng Guo

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Demircan Canadinc

Koç University

Intermetallics

0966-9795 (ISSN)

Vol. 113 106572

Subject Categories

Manufacturing, Surface and Joining Technology

Other Materials Engineering

Corrosion Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.intermet.2019.106572

More information

Latest update

11/11/2019