# Bioabsorbable WE43 Mg alloy wires modified by continuous plasma   electrolytic oxidation for implant applications. Part II: degradation and   biological performance

**Authors:** Wahaaj Ali, M\'onica Echeverry-Rend\'on, Guillermo Dominguez, Kerstin, van Gaalen, Alexander Kopp, Carlos Gonz\'alez, and Javier LLorca

arXiv: 2302.13778 · 2023-02-28

## TL;DR

This study investigates how plasma electrolytic oxidation improves the corrosion resistance and biocompatibility of WE43 magnesium alloy wires for implant use, showing enhanced performance and cell attachment after surface modification.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that continuous PEO creates a protective oxide layer on WE43 Mg wires, significantly enhancing their degradation behavior and biological compatibility for bioabsorbable implants.

## Key findings

- PEO-treated wires showed improved corrosion resistance.
- Cell attachment was observed on PEO-modified surfaces.
- Strength remained above 100 MPa after 96 hours in simulated body fluid.

## Abstract

The corrosion, mechanical degradation and biological performance of cold-drawn WE43 Mg wires were analyzed as a function of thermo-mechanical processing and the presence of a protective oxide layer created by continuous plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO). It was found that the corrosion properties of the non-surface-treated wire could be optimized by means of thermal treatment within certain limits, but the corrosion rate remained very high. Hence, strength and ductility of these wires vanished after 24 h of immersion in simulated body fluid at 37$^\circ$C and, as a result of that rather quick degradation, direct tests did not show any MC3T3-E1 preosteoblast cell attachment on the surface of the Mg wires. In contrast, surface modification of the annealed WE43 Mg wires by a continuous PEO process led to the formation of a homogeneous oxide layer of $\approx$ 8$\mu$m and significantly improved the corrosion resistance and hence the biocompatibility of the WE43 Mg wires. It was found that a dense layer of Ca/P was formed at the early stages of degradation on top of the Mg(OH)2 layer and hindered the diffusion of the Cl-ions which dissolve Mg(OH)2 and accelerate the corrosion of Mg alloys. As a result, pitting corrosion was suppressed and the strength of the Mg wires was above 100 MPa after 96 h of immersion in simulated body fluid at 37$^\circ$C. Moreover, many cells were able to attach on the surface of the PEO surface-modified wires during cell culture testing. These results demonstrate the potential of thin Mg wires surface-modified by continuous PEO in terms of mechanical, degradation and biological performance for bioabsorbable wire-based devices.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/2302.13778