## Abstract The surface conditions of Nitinol wires and tubing were evaluated with the use of X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy, high‐resolution Auger spectroscopy, electron backscattering, and scanning‐electron microscopy. Samples were studied in the as‐received state as well as after chemical etch
Effect of chemical etching and aging in boiling water on the corrosion resistance of nitinol wires with black oxide resulting from manufacturing process
✍ Scribed by Shabalovskaya, S. ;Rondelli, G. ;Anderegg, J. ;Simpson, B. ;Budko, S.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 578 KB
- Volume
- 66B
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9304
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The effect of chemical etching in a HF/HNO~3~ acid solution and aging in boiling water on the corrosion resistance of Nitinol wires with black oxide has been evaluated with the use of potentiodynamic, modified potentiostatic ASTM F746, and scratch tests. Scanning‐electron microscopy, elemental XPS, and Auger analysis were employed to characterize surface alterations induced by surface treatment and corrosion testing. The effect of aging in boiling water on the temperatures of martensitic transformations and shape recovery was evaluated by means of measuring the wire electroresistance. After corrosion tests, as‐received wires revealed uniformly cracked surfaces reminiscent of the stress‐corrosion‐cracking phenomenon. These wires exhibited negative breakdown potentials in potentiostatic tests and variable breakdown potentials in potentiodynamic tests (− 100 mV to + 400 mV versus SCE). Wires with treated surfaces did not reveal cracking or other traces of corrosion attacks in potentiodynamic tests up to + 900–1400‐mV potentials and no pitting after stimulation at + 800 mV in potentiostatic tests. They exhibited corrosion behavior satisfactory for medical applications. Significant improvement of corrosion parameters was observed on the reverse scans in potentiodynamic tests after exposure of treated wires to potentials > 1000 mV. In scratch tests, the prepared surfaces repassivated only at low potentials, comparable to that of stainless steel. Tremendous improvement of the corrosion behavior of treated Nitinol wires is associated with the removal of defect surface material and the growth of stable TiO~2~ oxide. The role of precipitates in the corrosion resistance of Nitinol—scratch repassivation capacity in particular—is emphasized in the discussion. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part B: Appl Biomater 66B: 331–340, 2003
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