Kurtz Peter W, Lee Hwaran, Mace Annsley, Goodwin Charley, Gilbert Jeremy
Clemson University-MUSC Bioengineering Program, Charleston, South Carolina, USA.
J Biomed Mater Res A. 2025 Feb;113(2):e37849. doi: 10.1002/jbm.a.37849.
Metallic biomaterials, such as cobalt chrome molybdenum (CoCrMo), Ti-6Al-4V, and 316L stainless steel are commonly used in orthopedic implant devices. Damage modes such as corrosion and wear are associated with the use of these alloys. One solution to limit wear and corrosion damage is to apply a surface coating to the medical device. In this study, using the low-energy electron beam (LEEB) of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), we induced a highly scratch-resistant oxygen and silicon-rich amorphous carbon film to grow on each of the above metallic biomaterials. LEEB interaction with adventitious surface carbon, silicone, and oxygen deposited on the above three alloys resulted in the layered-deposition formation (LEEB-LD) of a surface coating. Coating chemistry, morphology, and nano-scratch wear properties on each of the three alloys were characterized using atomic force microscopy (AFM) scratch testing and SEM/Energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) analysis. We hypothesized that LEEB-LD coatings could be deposited on these three metallic biomaterials with improved tribological properties than the underlying metal substrate. First, we generated coatings on all three biomaterials and documented the coating morphology (thickness and heterogeneity) and chemistry as a function of alloy, exposure time, and scan rate with coating thicknesses generated between 5 and 50 nm after 60 min of treatment, with each factor affecting the thickness. EDS maps showed high amounts of carbon, oxygen, and silicon in the modified surface which depended on the alloy (e.g., CoCrMo and SS had similar compositions while Ti had higher oxygen in the coatings). Coated and uncoated surfaces were then subjected to diamond scratch testing in an AFM at increasing force until the coating delaminated from the surface. Scratch-depth versus load and nominal Hertzian stress were plotted for both the uncoated and coated surfaces. We found that scratch depths were 40%, 75%, and 38% smaller on CoCrMo, Ti, and SS coatings, respectively, at the peak contact stresses tested (⍺ < 0.05), indicating higher hardness and wear resistance for the coatings. These results support the hypothesis that controlled thickness LEEB-LD oxygen and silicon-rich amorphous carbon coatings can be systematically generated using low-power electron beams and that these coatings have increased tribological (scratch-resistance) properties compared to the substrate metal.
金属生物材料,如钴铬钼(CoCrMo)、钛合金Ti-6Al-4V和316L不锈钢,常用于骨科植入器械。腐蚀和磨损等损伤模式与这些合金的使用有关。限制磨损和腐蚀损伤的一种解决方案是在医疗器械上施加表面涂层。在本研究中,我们利用扫描电子显微镜(SEM)的低能电子束(LEEB),诱导在上述每种金属生物材料上生长出高度耐刮擦的富含氧和硅的非晶碳膜。LEEB与沉积在上述三种合金上的外来表面碳、硅和氧相互作用,导致形成表面涂层的分层沉积(LEEB-LD)。使用原子力显微镜(AFM)划痕测试和SEM/能量色散光谱(EDS)分析对三种合金上的涂层化学、形态和纳米划痕磨损性能进行了表征。我们假设LEEB-LD涂层可以沉积在这三种金属生物材料上,其摩擦学性能比底层金属基体有所改善。首先,我们在所有三种生物材料上生成涂层,并记录涂层的形态(厚度和不均匀性)以及化学组成,作为合金、暴露时间和扫描速率的函数,在处理60分钟后生成的涂层厚度在5至50纳米之间,每个因素都会影响厚度。EDS图谱显示改性表面含有大量的碳、氧和硅,这取决于合金(例如,CoCrMo和不锈钢具有相似的成分,而钛涂层中的氧含量更高)。然后,在AFM中对涂覆和未涂覆的表面进行金刚石划痕测试,逐渐增加力,直到涂层从表面分层。绘制了未涂覆和涂覆表面的划痕深度与载荷以及名义赫兹应力的关系图。我们发现,在测试的峰值接触应力下(⍺ < 0.05),CoCrMo、钛和不锈钢涂层上划痕深度分别减小了40%、75%和38%,表明涂层具有更高的硬度和耐磨性。这些结果支持了这样的假设,即可以使用低功率电子束系统地生成可控厚度的LEEB-LD富含氧和硅的非晶碳涂层,并且与基体金属相比,这些涂层具有更高的摩擦学(耐刮擦)性能。