Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique

The Magnetron sputtering method was utilized to apply tantalum-oxide coatings on NiTi shape memory alloys, and this was done under 16.6 vol% oxygen, 83.4 vol% argon atmospheres at a substrate temperature of 300 °C. In the present article, the influence of sputtering rate on surface morphology, rough...

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Main Authors: Mahdiyeh Soltanalipour, Jafar Khalil-Allafi, Alireza Mehrvarz, Amir Kahaie Khosrowshahi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-03-01
Series:Journal of Materials Research and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2238785424003910
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author Mahdiyeh Soltanalipour
Jafar Khalil-Allafi
Alireza Mehrvarz
Amir Kahaie Khosrowshahi
author_facet Mahdiyeh Soltanalipour
Jafar Khalil-Allafi
Alireza Mehrvarz
Amir Kahaie Khosrowshahi
author_sort Mahdiyeh Soltanalipour
collection DOAJ
description The Magnetron sputtering method was utilized to apply tantalum-oxide coatings on NiTi shape memory alloys, and this was done under 16.6 vol% oxygen, 83.4 vol% argon atmospheres at a substrate temperature of 300 °C. In the present article, the influence of sputtering rate on surface morphology, roughness, corrosion behavior, and biological response of tantalum oxide coatings has been investigated via FESEM, AFM, potentiodynamic polarization method, and MTT assay, respectively. FESEM studies demonstrated the positive effect of sputtering rate on forming a uniform and dense layer under 0.8 Å s−1 sputtering rate. GI-XRD patterns depicted amorphous coatings in all samples, meaning 300 °C was not sufficient for the formation of crystallized TaxOy. The XPS results revealed that stoichiometric tantalum pentoxide formed at the top of the layer under 0.8 Å s−1 sputtering rate as there was enough oxygen to support the reaction. AFM 3D images of surface topographies suggested that all coatings possessed almost similar roughness values, but their line graphs showed irregular peaks and valleys for lower and higher sputtering rates. Electrochemical measurements indicated the expected results of supremacy in corrosion resistance for the sample sputtered under 0.8 Å s−1 with the most uniform morphology. Finally, the biocompatibility of the coatings was studied using specific human endothelial cells (HUVECs) to evaluate their potential for vascular applications. Unlike other results, the sample, which sputtered at the highest rate with lots of hills and valleys, showed the greatest cell viability and cellular activity on its surface.
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spelling doaj.art-57b8f4a0c1804a308de9bedb3698aad62024-03-24T06:58:18ZengElsevierJournal of Materials Research and Technology2238-78542024-03-012932793290Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering techniqueMahdiyeh Soltanalipour0Jafar Khalil-Allafi1Alireza Mehrvarz2Amir Kahaie Khosrowshahi3Research Center for Advanced Materials, Faculty of Materials Engineering, Sahand University of Technology, 51335-1996, Tabriz, IranResearch Center for Advanced Materials, Faculty of Materials Engineering, Sahand University of Technology, 51335-1996, Tabriz, Iran; Corresponding author. Research Center for Advanced Materials, Faculty of Materials Engineering, Sahand University of Technology, P. O. Box, 51335, Tabriz, Iran.Research Center for Advanced Materials, Faculty of Materials Engineering, Sahand University of Technology, 51335-1996, Tabriz, IranDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Sahand University of Technology, 51335-1996, Tabriz, Iran; Tissue Engineering and Stem Cells Research Center, Sahand University of Technology, 51335-1996, Tabriz, IranThe Magnetron sputtering method was utilized to apply tantalum-oxide coatings on NiTi shape memory alloys, and this was done under 16.6 vol% oxygen, 83.4 vol% argon atmospheres at a substrate temperature of 300 °C. In the present article, the influence of sputtering rate on surface morphology, roughness, corrosion behavior, and biological response of tantalum oxide coatings has been investigated via FESEM, AFM, potentiodynamic polarization method, and MTT assay, respectively. FESEM studies demonstrated the positive effect of sputtering rate on forming a uniform and dense layer under 0.8 Å s−1 sputtering rate. GI-XRD patterns depicted amorphous coatings in all samples, meaning 300 °C was not sufficient for the formation of crystallized TaxOy. The XPS results revealed that stoichiometric tantalum pentoxide formed at the top of the layer under 0.8 Å s−1 sputtering rate as there was enough oxygen to support the reaction. AFM 3D images of surface topographies suggested that all coatings possessed almost similar roughness values, but their line graphs showed irregular peaks and valleys for lower and higher sputtering rates. Electrochemical measurements indicated the expected results of supremacy in corrosion resistance for the sample sputtered under 0.8 Å s−1 with the most uniform morphology. Finally, the biocompatibility of the coatings was studied using specific human endothelial cells (HUVECs) to evaluate their potential for vascular applications. Unlike other results, the sample, which sputtered at the highest rate with lots of hills and valleys, showed the greatest cell viability and cellular activity on its surface.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2238785424003910NiTi alloyTantalum oxideMagnetron sputteringCorrosion resistanceEndothelial cellsBiocompatibility
spellingShingle Mahdiyeh Soltanalipour
Jafar Khalil-Allafi
Alireza Mehrvarz
Amir Kahaie Khosrowshahi
Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique
Journal of Materials Research and Technology
NiTi alloy
Tantalum oxide
Magnetron sputtering
Corrosion resistance
Endothelial cells
Biocompatibility
title Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique
title_full Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique
title_fullStr Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique
title_full_unstemmed Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique
title_short Effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations, corrosion resistance, and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on NiTi using magnetron sputtering technique
title_sort effect of sputtering rate on morphological alterations corrosion resistance and endothelial biocompatibility by deposited tantalum oxide coatings on niti using magnetron sputtering technique
topic NiTi alloy
Tantalum oxide
Magnetron sputtering
Corrosion resistance
Endothelial cells
Biocompatibility
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2238785424003910
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