Bioactive Coatings Formed on Titanium by Plasma Electrolytic Oxidation: Composition and Properties

Materials (Basel). 2020 Sep 16;13(18):4121. doi: 10.3390/ma13184121.

Abstract

Bioactive coatings on VT1-0 commercially pure titanium were formed by the plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO). A study of the morphological features of coatings was carried out using scanning electron microscopy. A composition of formed coatings was investigated using energy-dispersive spectroscopy and X-ray diffractometry analysis. It was shown that PEO-coatings have calcium phosphate in their composition, which increases the bioactivity of the surface layer. Electrochemical properties of the samples were studied by potentiondynamic polarization and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy in different physiological media: simulated body fluid and minimum essential medium. The data of electrochemical studies indicate more than 15 times decrease in the corrosion current density for the sample with coating (5.0 × 10-9 A/cm2) as compared to the bare titanium (7.7 × 10-8 A/cm2). The formed PEO-layers have elastoplastic properties close to human bone (12-30 GPa) and a lower friction coefficient in comparison with bare metal. The wettability of PEO-layers increased. The contact angle for formed coatings reduced by more than 60° in comparison with bare metal (from 73° for titanium to 8° for PEO-coating). Such an increase in surface hydrophilicity contributes to the greater biocompatibility of the formed coating in comparison with commercially pure titanium. PEO can be prospective as a method for improving titanium surface bioactivity.

Keywords: biocompatible coatings; calcium phosphate; corrosion; hydrophilicity; minimum essential medium; plasma electrolytic oxidation; protective coatings; simulated body fluid; titanium; wear.