Qixiang Zhan , Shuhua Deng , Jiayi He , Jinhua Xu , Anfu Chen , Jiajun Luo , Wenjie Zhang , Caihong Lei
{"title":"A coating with hydrogel@nanostructure on Ti surfaces via controllable Nano-mechanical interlocking","authors":"Qixiang Zhan , Shuhua Deng , Jiayi He , Jinhua Xu , Anfu Chen , Jiajun Luo , Wenjie Zhang , Caihong Lei","doi":"10.1016/j.surfcoat.2024.131508","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>The elasticity mismatch between Ti and tissue limits the performance of Ti medical devices. How to create a coating with mimicking natural soft tissue stiffness and possessing strong mechanical bond is a challenge in implant manufacturing. Here, we developed a combined coating, that is, an anodized Ti surface (ATS) with nanostructures coated with a layer of PAAm hydrogel with tunable elasticity. Due to the nano-mechanical interlocking and hydrogen bonding synergy, the PAAm hydrogel layer was tightly anchored in nanostructures on the ATS. By regulating the oxidation voltage, nanostructures including nanopores, nanotubes, and punch-through nanotubes were fabricated on the ATS, and these three kinds of anodized nanostructures increase the porosity of the ATS sequentially. The lap shear test has shown that the shear strength increases linearly with increasing the porosity, and the shear strength of the punch-through nanotube structures with the PAAm hydrogel coating reaches 59.28 kPa. The adhesion mechanism between the anodized Ti nanostructures and the PAAm hydrogel coating is mainly due to the nano-mechanical interlocking and hydrogen bonding synergy, which was proven by morphology analysis, XRD, and ATR-FTIR characterization of the samples subjected to lap shear load. The hydrogel-nanostructures coating has demonstrated the potential to be applied in Ti medical devices.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":22009,"journal":{"name":"Surface & Coatings Technology","volume":"494 ","pages":"Article 131508"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Surface & Coatings Technology","FirstCategoryId":"88","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0257897224011393","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"材料科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MATERIALS SCIENCE, COATINGS & FILMS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The elasticity mismatch between Ti and tissue limits the performance of Ti medical devices. How to create a coating with mimicking natural soft tissue stiffness and possessing strong mechanical bond is a challenge in implant manufacturing. Here, we developed a combined coating, that is, an anodized Ti surface (ATS) with nanostructures coated with a layer of PAAm hydrogel with tunable elasticity. Due to the nano-mechanical interlocking and hydrogen bonding synergy, the PAAm hydrogel layer was tightly anchored in nanostructures on the ATS. By regulating the oxidation voltage, nanostructures including nanopores, nanotubes, and punch-through nanotubes were fabricated on the ATS, and these three kinds of anodized nanostructures increase the porosity of the ATS sequentially. The lap shear test has shown that the shear strength increases linearly with increasing the porosity, and the shear strength of the punch-through nanotube structures with the PAAm hydrogel coating reaches 59.28 kPa. The adhesion mechanism between the anodized Ti nanostructures and the PAAm hydrogel coating is mainly due to the nano-mechanical interlocking and hydrogen bonding synergy, which was proven by morphology analysis, XRD, and ATR-FTIR characterization of the samples subjected to lap shear load. The hydrogel-nanostructures coating has demonstrated the potential to be applied in Ti medical devices.
期刊介绍:
Surface and Coatings Technology is an international archival journal publishing scientific papers on significant developments in surface and interface engineering to modify and improve the surface properties of materials for protection in demanding contact conditions or aggressive environments, or for enhanced functional performance. Contributions range from original scientific articles concerned with fundamental and applied aspects of research or direct applications of metallic, inorganic, organic and composite coatings, to invited reviews of current technology in specific areas. Papers submitted to this journal are expected to be in line with the following aspects in processes, and properties/performance:
A. Processes: Physical and chemical vapour deposition techniques, thermal and plasma spraying, surface modification by directed energy techniques such as ion, electron and laser beams, thermo-chemical treatment, wet chemical and electrochemical processes such as plating, sol-gel coating, anodization, plasma electrolytic oxidation, etc., but excluding painting.
B. Properties/performance: friction performance, wear resistance (e.g., abrasion, erosion, fretting, etc), corrosion and oxidation resistance, thermal protection, diffusion resistance, hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity, and properties relevant to smart materials behaviour and enhanced multifunctional performance for environmental, energy and medical applications, but excluding device aspects.