1. Coupling of Metals and Biominerals: Characterizing the Interface between Ferromagnetic Shape-Memory Alloys and Hydroxyapatite
- Author
-
Mareike Zink, Susanne Selle, Stefan G. Mayr, Thomas Höche, Uta Allenstein, Meike Tadsen, and Christian Patzig
- Subjects
Materials science ,Delamination ,Nanotechnology ,Shape-memory alloy ,Osseointegration ,Characterization (materials science) ,Durapatite ,Coated Materials, Biocompatible ,Ferromagnetism ,Metals ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Materials Testing ,Alloys ,Magnets ,Coupling (piping) ,General Materials Science ,Density functional theory - Abstract
Durable, mechanically robust osseointegration of metal implants poses one of the largest challenges in contemporary orthopedics. The application of biomimetic hydroxyapatite (HAp) coatings as mediators for enhanced mechanical coupling to natural bone constitutes a promising approach. Motivated by recent advances in the field of smart metals that might open the venue for alternate therapeutic concepts, we explore their mechanical coupling to sputter-deposited HAp layers in a combined experimental-theoretical study. While experimental delamination tests and comprehensive structural characterization, including high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, are utilized to establish structure-property relationships, density functional theory based total energy calculations unravel the underlying physics and chemistry of bonding and confirm the experimental findings. Experiments and modeling indicate that sputter-deposited HAp coatings are strongly adherent to the exemplary ferromagnetic shape-memory alloys, Ni-Mn-Ga and Fe-Pd, with delamination stresses and interface bonding strength exceeding the physiological scales by orders of magnitude.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF