Method for surface treatment of a bio-compatible metal material and implant treated by said method
20210252187 · 2021-08-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61C8/0012
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B24C1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L2400/18
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L2400/12
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L2430/02
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61C2008/0046
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B24C11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L27/50
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A61C8/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/50
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B24C1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A biocompatible metal implant is provided with a treated surface subject to abrasive mechanical treatment, acid treatment, and sodium treatment, where the biocampatible metal implant treated surface has a macroporosity in the form of cells having dimensions of the order of 50 μm to 250 μm, the cells having pores of from 1 μm to 50 μm, and pores with a size of less than a micrometer, homogeneously over the whole of the treated surface, the treated surface having a surface roughness Ra of greater than or equal to 1.90 μm.
Claims
1. A biocompatible metal implant comprising: at least one treated surface, said treated surface subject to abrasive mechanical treatment of the surface of said material by means of abrasive grains based on calcium phosphate; said treated surface subject to acid treatment by soaking, at a temperature above 40° C., said material in a bath comprising sulfuric acid and hydrochloric acid, followed by at least one rinse with demineralized water; and said treated surface subject to sodium treatment by soaking, at a temperature above 40° C., said material in a sodium hydroxide-based bath having only sodium hydroxide, followed by at least one rinse with demineralized water and by hot air drying, wherein said biocampatible metal implant treated surface has a macroporosity in the form of cells having dimensions of the order of 50 μm to 250 μm, said cells comprising pores of from 1 μm to 50 μm, and pores with a size of less than a micrometer, homogeneously over the whole of the treated surface, said treated surface having a surface roughness Ra of greater than or equal to 1.90 μm.
2. The biocompatible metal implant as claimed in claim 1, wherein the contact angle of the treated surface is less than or equal to 10° in the presence of distilled water or ethylene glycol as wetting agent.
3. The biocompatible metal implant as claimed in claim 1, wherein said biocompatible metal implant is made of an alloy of titanium, aluminum and vanadium, such as the alloy known as TA6V ELI, and wherein said biocompatible metal implant has undergone a surface treatment, said treated surface of said biocompatible metal implant having contents of aluminum and vanadium that are reduced by at least 30% relative to the initial alloy, measured by EDS analysis.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0036] The invention will be clearly understood on reading the following description of an exemplary embodiment, with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Example 1 According to the Invention
[0043] The surface treatment of an implant made of TA6V ELI alloy (according to the standard ASTM F136, a titanium-based alloy containing 6% by weight of aluminum and 4% by weight of vanadium: see table 1) is carried out according to a treatment known as “nano-etching” in three consecutive steps, described in detail below.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Fe O N C H Al V max. % max. % max. % max. % max. % % % 0.25 0.13 0.05 0.08 0.012 5.50-6.50 3.50-4.50
Step 1: Mechanical Treatment
[0044] The implants are sandblasted with an abrasive composed of hydroxyapatite (85%±5%) and tricalcium phosphate (15%±5%) having a Vickers hardness equal to 532 Hv, having a diameter of the powder grains of between 160 and 400 μm, with a predominance of grains having a size of between 200 and 360 μm in diameter.
[0045] This step consists in creating porosities having a size ranging up to 250 μm in diameter.
[0046] The grains of abrasives are projected using a nozzle positioned at around 10 to 20 cm from the surface of the implant under a pressure of from 5 to 7 bar for 60±10 seconds.
Step 2: Acid Treatment
[0047] This step consists in creating porosities of several tens of microns in diameter and in depth homogeneously over the entire surface treated.
[0048] The treatment is carried out in a mixture composed of two acids. The acid composition and the treatment parameters are described below: [0049] composition of the bath: 50%±5% by volume of 95% sulfuric acid and 50%±5% by volume of 37% hydrochloric acid, [0050] treatment temperature: 67±2.5° C., [0051] treatment time: 22±1 min, [0052] with stirring of the bath.
[0053] A longer treatment time or a temperature above the range indicated results in an attack of the macro-roughness created in step 1.
Step 3: Sodium Treatment
[0054] The objective of this treatment is to create a tissue of nanometer-size porosity at the surface of the implant.
[0055] This step is carried out in a sodium hydroxide bath, as follows: [0056] composition of the bath: 5±0.5 M (5±0.5 mol/L) sodium hydroxide, [0057] bath temperature: 67±2.5° C., [0058] treatment time: 22±1 min, [0059] stirring of the bath.
[0060] An insufficient sodium treatment (insufficient NaOH concentration, for instance of less than 4 mol/L, lower temperature or shorter treatment time) leads to surfaces that are less hydrophilic with contact angles in the presence of distilled water, ethylene glycol or diiodomethane of greater than 50°, or even greater than 70°, and also to an insufficient nanoporosity.
Results of SEM Observations:
[0061] The images obtained by observation with the scanning electron microscope, presented in
[0062] The surface has, specifically, an appearance with porosities of several tens of microns in diameter which themselves comprise porosities of several microns in diameter and in depth. These same microporosities also comprise porosities having a diameter and a depth of less than a micron, namely several hundred nanometers. The presence of this triple level of porosity at the surface of the material constitutes a significant advantage for the osseointegration of the implant.
[0063] It is even possible to observe, on the SEM image with a magnification of 30 000, a tissue of very fine fibers that covers the entire treated surface.
[0064] EDS analyses (Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy analyses, carried out under vacuum with a FEI QUANTA 200 machine) of this surface reveal a strong presence of titanium and of oxygen (therefore probably of titanium oxide), as presented in table 2 below which compares the chemical composition of the treated surface and that of the crude alloy before treatment.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Composition by weight (%) Alloy with treated Crude Elements surface alloy Titanium 66.15 86.95-89.20 Oxygen 26.11 0.5 Aluminum 3.50 5.5-6.75 Vanadium 1.92 3.5-4.5 Carbon 1.44 0.08 Sodium 0.11 — Iron — 0.4 Hydrogen — 0.015
[0065] The surface of the alloy treated according to the invention has lower contents of aluminum and of vanadium than those present at the surface of a crude grade 23 (TA6V ELI) titanium alloy. These analyses also demonstrate the strong presence of oxygen at the surface of the treated implant, which means that there is formation of a titanium oxide layer.
Comparative Example 2
[0066] A surface treatment of an implant made of Straumann SLA® titanium-based alloy is carried out according to the same three steps and under conditions identical to those of example 1 above.
Roughness Measurements:
[0067] The results of the Ra and Rz roughness measurements (carried out using a MITOTOYO SJ400 machine) comparing the surfaces of the implants treated according to example 1 and comparative example 2 are presented in table 3 below.
[0068] The meanings of Ra and Rz are the following:
“Ra”: mean deviation. It is the arithmetic mean of the absolute values of the deviations, between the peaks and the valleys. “Ra” measures the distance between this mean and the “central line”.
“Rz”: regularity. It is the mean of the greatest difference in height between the highest point of a peak and the lowest bottom of a valley, observed over 5 lengths.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Surfaces tested Ra Rz Comments Example 1 1.90 μm 10.46 μm The surface of the implant from example Example 2 1.83 μm 10.03 μm 1 is rougher than (Comp.) that of the implant from example 2
Contact Angle Measurements:
[0069] Contact angle measurements were carried out with three different liquids (distilled water, ethylene glycol and diiodomethane) for the implants from examples 1 and 2. The results, presented in