4.6 Article

Influence of Degradation Product Thickness on the Elastic Stiffness of Porous Absorbable Scaffolds Made from an Bioabsorbable Zn-Mg Alloy

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14206027

Keywords

additive manufacturing; scaffolds; bioabsorbable metals; biodegradation; lattice structures; stiffness properties

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
  2. Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia (MKW) [OPSF597]

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AM porous scaffolds made of absorbable metals like magnesium, zinc, or iron, designed for orthopaedic applications, show decreasing Young's modulus over time due to product dissolution in a physiological environment. The initial increase in smeared Young's modulus for magnesium-based scaffolds is attributed to a forming substrate layer of degradation products. Even low thicknesses and Young's moduli of the substrate layer significantly increase the smeared Young's modulus under axial compression, as validated by compression tests on Zn1Mg AM scaffolds.
For orthopaedic applications, additive manufactured (AM) porous scaffolds made of absorbable metals such as magnesium, zinc or iron are of particular interest. They do not only offer the potential to design and fabricate bio-mimetic or rather bone-equivalent mechanical properties, they also do not need to be removed in further surgery. Located in a physiological environment, scaffolds made of absorbable metals show a decreasing Young's modulus over time, due to product dissolution. For magnesium-based scaffolds during the first days an increase of the smeared Young's modulus can be observed, which is mainly attributed to a forming substrate layer of degradation products on the strut surfaces. In this study, the influence of degradation products on the stiffness properties of metallic scaffolds is investigated. For this, analytical calculations and finite-element simulations are performed to study the influence of the substrate layer thickness and Young's modulus for single struts and for a new scaffold geometry with adapted polar cubic face-centered unit cells with vertical struts (f2cc,z). The finite-element model is further validated by compression tests on AM scaffolds made from Zn1Mg (1 wt% Mg). The results show that even low thicknesses and Young's moduli of the substrate layer significantly increases the smeared Young's modulus under axial compression.

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