Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium

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Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium. / Medeiros, Mariana P.; Lopes, Debora R.; Carvalho, Amanda P. et al.
In: Advanced Engineering Materials, Vol. 26.2024, No. 22, 2401605, 04.10.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Medeiros, MP, Lopes, DR, Carvalho, AP, Hohenwarter, A, Kawasaki, M, Cupertino-Malheiros, L & Figueiredo, RB 2024, 'Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium', Advanced Engineering Materials, vol. 26.2024, no. 22, 2401605. https://doi.org/10.1002/adem.202401605

APA

Medeiros, M. P., Lopes, D. R., Carvalho, A. P., Hohenwarter, A., Kawasaki, M., Cupertino-Malheiros, L., & Figueiredo, R. B. (2024). Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium. Advanced Engineering Materials, 26.2024(22), Article 2401605. https://doi.org/10.1002/adem.202401605

Vancouver

Medeiros MP, Lopes DR, Carvalho AP, Hohenwarter A, Kawasaki M, Cupertino-Malheiros L et al. Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium. Advanced Engineering Materials. 2024 Oct 4;26.2024(22):2401605. doi: 10.1002/adem.202401605

Author

Medeiros, Mariana P. ; Lopes, Debora R. ; Carvalho, Amanda P. et al. / Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium. In: Advanced Engineering Materials. 2024 ; Vol. 26.2024, No. 22.

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@article{a37b4e59dfce4b9fa343ff6b469ba457,
title = "Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium",
abstract = "It is known that the grain size plays a major role in the mechanical properties of magnesium. The aim of the present study is to evaluate its role in long-term corrosion rate. Samples of pure magnesium with grain sizes in the range of 0.9–82 μm are produced through severe plastic deformation and annealing treatments. The mechanical properties are evaluated using tensile tests and the corrosion behavior is evaluated using immersion tests in Hank's solution. A maximum yield stress of ≈150 MPa is observed in the sample with 1.8 μm of grain size and an elongation larger than 25% is observed in the ultrafine-grained sample. Ultrafine- and fine-grained magnesium display uniform corrosion with a decreasing corrosion rate while coarse-grained magnesium displays localized corrosion with an accelerated corrosion rate. A corrosion rate of ≈0.2 mm year−1 is observed in the ultrafine- and fine-grained magnesium. The corrosion product layer of the fine-grained magnesium contains elements absorbed from the media. An analysis of the data in the literature suggests that grain refinement changes the corrosion type from localized to uniform corrosion. The exact relationship between grain size and the corrosion rate remains elusive.",
keywords = "biodegradations, corrosion, grain sizes, magnesium",
author = "Medeiros, {Mariana P.} and Lopes, {Debora R.} and Carvalho, {Amanda P.} and Anton Hohenwarter and Megumi Kawasaki and Livia Cupertino-Malheiros and Figueiredo, {Roberto Braga}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1002/adem.202401605",
language = "English",
volume = "26.2024",
journal = "Advanced Engineering Materials",
issn = "1438-1656",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH ",
number = "22",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Unveiling the Effect of Grain Size on Biodegradation of Magnesium

AU - Medeiros, Mariana P.

AU - Lopes, Debora R.

AU - Carvalho, Amanda P.

AU - Hohenwarter, Anton

AU - Kawasaki, Megumi

AU - Cupertino-Malheiros, Livia

AU - Figueiredo, Roberto Braga

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

PY - 2024/10/4

Y1 - 2024/10/4

N2 - It is known that the grain size plays a major role in the mechanical properties of magnesium. The aim of the present study is to evaluate its role in long-term corrosion rate. Samples of pure magnesium with grain sizes in the range of 0.9–82 μm are produced through severe plastic deformation and annealing treatments. The mechanical properties are evaluated using tensile tests and the corrosion behavior is evaluated using immersion tests in Hank's solution. A maximum yield stress of ≈150 MPa is observed in the sample with 1.8 μm of grain size and an elongation larger than 25% is observed in the ultrafine-grained sample. Ultrafine- and fine-grained magnesium display uniform corrosion with a decreasing corrosion rate while coarse-grained magnesium displays localized corrosion with an accelerated corrosion rate. A corrosion rate of ≈0.2 mm year−1 is observed in the ultrafine- and fine-grained magnesium. The corrosion product layer of the fine-grained magnesium contains elements absorbed from the media. An analysis of the data in the literature suggests that grain refinement changes the corrosion type from localized to uniform corrosion. The exact relationship between grain size and the corrosion rate remains elusive.

AB - It is known that the grain size plays a major role in the mechanical properties of magnesium. The aim of the present study is to evaluate its role in long-term corrosion rate. Samples of pure magnesium with grain sizes in the range of 0.9–82 μm are produced through severe plastic deformation and annealing treatments. The mechanical properties are evaluated using tensile tests and the corrosion behavior is evaluated using immersion tests in Hank's solution. A maximum yield stress of ≈150 MPa is observed in the sample with 1.8 μm of grain size and an elongation larger than 25% is observed in the ultrafine-grained sample. Ultrafine- and fine-grained magnesium display uniform corrosion with a decreasing corrosion rate while coarse-grained magnesium displays localized corrosion with an accelerated corrosion rate. A corrosion rate of ≈0.2 mm year−1 is observed in the ultrafine- and fine-grained magnesium. The corrosion product layer of the fine-grained magnesium contains elements absorbed from the media. An analysis of the data in the literature suggests that grain refinement changes the corrosion type from localized to uniform corrosion. The exact relationship between grain size and the corrosion rate remains elusive.

KW - biodegradations

KW - corrosion

KW - grain sizes

KW - magnesium

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205497214&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1002/adem.202401605

DO - 10.1002/adem.202401605

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85205497214

VL - 26.2024

JO - Advanced Engineering Materials

JF - Advanced Engineering Materials

SN - 1438-1656

IS - 22

M1 - 2401605

ER -