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Dive into the research topics where Mariana Calin is active.

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Featured researches published by Mariana Calin.


Scripta Materialia | 2003

Improved mechanical behavior of Cu–Ti-based bulk metallic glass by in situ formation of nanoscale precipitates

Mariana Calin; J. Eckert; L. Schultz

Abstract The mechanical properties of Cu 47 Ti 34 Zr 11 Ni 8 , Cu 47 Ti 33 Zr 11 Ni 8 Fe 1 , and Cu 47 Ti 33 Zr 11 Ni 8 Si 1 bulk metallic glasses prepared by copper mold casting are investigated. Room temperature compression tests reveal fracture strengths above 2000 MPa, Young’s moduli around 100 GPa and elastic strains slightly exceeding 2.0%. Only Cu 47 Ti 33 Zr 11 Ni 8 Si 1 exhibits distinct plastic strain due to a unique composite microstructure with in situ formed nanoscale precipitates in the glassy matrix.


Materials Science and Engineering: C | 2013

Designing biocompatible Ti-based metallic glasses for implant applications

Mariana Calin; Annett Gebert; Andreea Cosmina Ghinea; Petre Flaviu Gostin; Somayeh Abdi; Christine Mickel; J. Eckert

Ti-based metallic glasses show high potential for implant applications; they overcome in several crucial respects their well-established biocompatible crystalline counterparts, e.g. improved corrosion properties, higher fracture strength and wear resistance, increased elastic strain range and lower Youngs modulus. However, some of the elements required for glass formation (e.g. Cu, Ni) are harmful for the human body. We critically reviewed the biological safety and glass forming tendency in Ti of 27 elements. This can be used as a basis for the future designing of novel amorphous Ti-based implant alloys entirely free of harmful additions. In this paper, two first alloys were developed: Ti(75)Zr(10)Si(15) and Ti(60)Nb(15)Zr(10)Si(15). The overheating temperature of the melt before casting can be used as the controlling parameter to produce fully amorphous materials or bcc-Ti-phase reinforced metallic glass nano-composites. The beneficial effect of Nb addition on the glass-formation and amorphous phase stability was assessed by X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy and differential scanning calorimetry. Crystallization and mechanical behavior of ribbons are influenced by the amount and distribution of the nano-scaled bcc phase existing in the as-cast state. Their electrochemical stability in Ringers solution at 310 K was found to be significantly better than that of commercial Ti-based biomaterials; no indication for pitting corrosion was recorded.


Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2013

Thermal stability and phase transformations of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys.

Matthias Bönisch; Mariana Calin; T. Waitz; Ajit Panigrahi; M. Zehetbauer; Annett Gebert; Werner Skrotzki; J. Eckert

Abstract Aiming at understanding the governing microstructural phenomena during heat treatments of Ni-free Ti-based shape memory materials for biomedical applications, a series of Ti–Nb alloys with Nb concentrations up to 29 wt% was produced by cold-crucible casting, followed by homogenization treatment and water quenching. Despite the large amount of literature available concerning the thermal stability and ageing behavior of Ti–Nb alloys, only few studies were performed dealing with the isochronal transformation behavior of initially martensitic Ti–Nb alloys. In this work, the formation of martensites (α′ and α″) and their stability under different thermal processing conditions were investigated by a combination of x-ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, dilatometry and electron microscopy. The effect of Nb additions on the structural competition in correlation with stable and metastable phase diagrams was also studied. Alloys with 24 wt% Nb or less undergo a transformation sequence on heating from room temperature to 1155 K. In alloys containing >24 wt% Nb α″ martensitically reverts back to β0, which is highly unstable against chemical demixing by formation of isothermal ωiso. During slow cooling from the single phase β domain α precipitates and only very limited amounts of α″ martensite form.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Design of ductile bulk metallic glasses by adding ''soft'' atoms

N. Zheng; R. T. Qu; S. Pauly; Mariana Calin; Thomas Gemming; Z. F. Zhang; J. Eckert

We propose a strategy for the design of ductile bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) through minor substitution using relatively large atoms, which make the bonding nature become more metallic and with it less shear resistant. Such a locally modified structure results in topological heterogeneity, which appears to be crucial for achieving enhanced plasticity. This strategy is verified for Ti-Zr-Cu-Pd glassy alloys, in which Cu was replaced by In, and seems to be extendable to other BMG systems. The atomic-scale heterogeneity in BMGs is somewhat analog to defects in crystalline alloys and helps to improve the overall plasticity of BMGs.


Applied Physics Letters | 2006

Deformation-induced nanostructuring in a Ti–Nb–Ta–In β alloy

W. Xu; Ki Buem Kim; J. Das; Mariana Calin; B. Rellinghaus; J. Eckert

Easy deformation-induced nanostructuring was found in a Ti–Nb–Ta–In β alloy with low stability against α″ martensitic transformation. Upon severe plastic deformation at the sample center, the reversible β→α″ martensitic transformation plays a significant role for grain refinement. A possible mechanism is proposed, in which the formation of fine martensite, the interaction among slip dislocations, martensite and twins, and the reversible transition from α″ back to β phase are considered as the main causes leading to pronounced grain refinement to the nanoscale.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2013

Surface treatment, corrosion behavior, and apatite-forming ability of Ti-45Nb implant alloy†

Petre Flaviu Gostin; Arne Helth; Andrea Voss; Ralph Sueptitz; Mariana Calin; J. Eckert; Annett Gebert

The low modulus β-type Ti-45Nb alloy is a promising new implant alloy due to its excellent mechanical biocompatibility and composition of non-toxic elements. The effect of surface treatments on the evolution of controlled topography and roughness was investigated by means of scanning electron microscopy and optical profilometry. Severe mechanical treatments, for example sand-blasting, or etching treatments in strongly oxidizing acidic solutions, like HF:HNO(3) (4:1) or H(2)SO(4):H(2)O(2) (1:1) piranha solution were found to be very effective. In particular, the latter generates a nanopatterned surface topography which is expected to be promising for the stimulation of bone tissue growth. Compared to Ti and Ti-6Al-4V, the β-type Ti-45Nb alloy requires significantly longer etching durations due to the high chemical stability of Nb. Severe surface treatments alter the passive film properties, but do not deteriorate the outstanding corrosion resistance of the Ti-45Nb alloy in synthetic body fluid environments. The Ti-45Nb appears to have a lower apatite-formation ability compared to Ti. Etching with H(2)SO(4):H(2)O(2) (1:1) piranha solution inhibits apatite formation on Ti, but not on Ti-45Nb.


Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2017

Composition optimization of low modulus and high-strength TiNb-based alloys for biomedical applications

I.V. Okulov; A.S. Volegov; Hooyar Attar; Matthias Bönisch; Shima Ehtemam-Haghighi; Mariana Calin; J. Eckert

The effect of chemical composition on microstructure and tensile properties of a series of low modulus Ti-Nb-Cu-Ni-Al alloys was studied. These alloys consist of primary micrometer-sized β-Ti dendrites surrounded by intermetallic phases. The morphology of the intermetallic phases is strongly affected by composition. Due to the composite microstructure, the alloys exhibit a low Youngs modulus (77-84GPa) together with a high yield strength of about 1000MPa as well as moderate tensile ductility. The results demonstrate that complete substitution of Al by Ti reduces the Youngs modulus by 5%. Increasing Nb content at the expense of Ti causes a significant improvement of tensile ductility.


Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2014

Elastic softening of β-type Ti–Nb alloys by indium (In) additions

Mariana Calin; Arne Helth; Julio J. Gutierrez Moreno; Matthias Bönisch; Varvara Brackmann; Lars Giebeler; Thomas Gemming; Christina E. Lekka; Annett Gebert; Reinhard Schnettler; Jürgen Eckert

Recent developments showed that β-type Ti-Nb alloys are good candidates for hard tissue replacement and repair. However, their elastic moduli are still to be further reduced to match Young׳s modulus values of human bone, in order to avoid stress shielding. In the present study, the effect of indium (In) additions on the structural characteristics and elastic modulus of Ti-40 Nb was investigated by experimental and theoretical (ab initio) methods. Several β-type (Ti-40 Nb)-xIn alloys (with x ≤ 5.2 wt%) were produced by cold-crucible casting and subsequent heat treatments (solid solutioning in the β-field followed by water quenching). All studied alloys completely retain the β-phase in the quenched condition. Room temperature mechanical tests revealed ultimate compressive strengths exceeding 770 MPa, large plastic strains (>20%) and a remarkable strain hardening. The addition of up to 5.2 wt% indium leads to a noticeable decrease of the elastic modulus from 69 GPa to 49 GPa, which is closer to that of cortical bone (<30 GPa). Youngs modulus is closely related to the bcc lattice stability and bonding characteristics. The presence of In atoms softens the parent bcc crystal lattice, as reflected by a lower elastic modulus and reduced yield strength. Ab initio and XRD data agree that upon In substitution the bcc unit cell volume increases almost linearly. The bonding characteristics of In were studied in detail, focusing on the energies that appeared from the EDOSs significant for possible hybridizations. It came out that minor In additions introduce low energy states with s character that present antibonding features with the Ti first neighboring atoms as well as with the Ti-Nb second neighboring atoms thus weakening the chemical bonds and leading to elastic softening. These results could be of use in the design of low rigidity β-type Ti-alloys with non-toxic additions, suitable for orthopedic applications.


Materials | 2013

Production of Porous β-Type Ti-40Nb Alloy for Biomedical Applications: Comparison of Selective Laser Melting and Hot Pressing

Ksenia Zhuravleva; Matthias Bönisch; K.G. Prashanth; Ute Hempel; Arne Helth; Thomas Gemming; Mariana Calin; S. Scudino; L. Schultz; J. Eckert; Annett Gebert

We used selective laser melting (SLM) and hot pressing of mechanically-alloyed β-type Ti–40Nb powder to fabricate macroporous bulk specimens (solid cylinders). The total porosity, compressive strength, and compressive elastic modulus of the SLM-fabricated material were determined as 17% ± 1%, 968 ± 8 MPa, and 33 ± 2 GPa, respectively. The alloy’s elastic modulus is comparable to that of healthy cancellous bone. The comparable results for the hot-pressed material were 3% ± 2%, 1400 ± 19 MPa, and 77 ± 3 GPa. This difference in mechanical properties results from different porosity and phase composition of the two alloys. Both SLM-fabricated and hot-pressed cylinders demonstrated good in vitro biocompatibility. The presented results suggest that the SLM-fabricated alloy may be preferable to the hot-pressed alloy for biomedical applications, such as the manufacture of load-bearing metallic components for total joint replacements.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2014

Chemical nanoroughening of Ti40Nb surfaces and its effect on human mesenchymal stromal cell response.

Arne Helth; Petre Flaviu Gostin; Steffen Oswald; H. Wendrock; U. Wolff; Ute Hempel; Stefan Arnhold; Mariana Calin; J. Eckert; Annett Gebert

Samples of low modulus beta-type Ti40Nb and cp2-Ti were chemically treated with 98% H2 SO4 + 30% H2 O2 (vol. ratio 1:1) solution. Surface analytical studies conducted with HR-SEM, AFM, and XPS identified a characteristic nanoroughness of the alloy surface related with a network of nanopits of ∼25 nm diameter. This is very similar to that obtained for cp2-Ti. The treatment enhances the oxide layer growth compared to mechanically ground states and causes a strong enrichment of Nb2 O5 relative to TiO2 on the alloy surface. The in vitro analyses clearly indicated that the chemical treatment accelerates the adhesion and spreading of human mesenchymal stromal cells (hMSC), increases the metabolic activity, and the enzyme activity of tissue non-specific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP). Surface structures which were generated mimic the cytoplasmic projections of the cells on the nanoscale. Those effects are more pronounced for the Ti40Nb alloy than for cp2-Ti. The relation between alloy surface topography and chemistry and cell functions is discussed.

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J. Eckert

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Matthias Bönisch

Dresden University of Technology

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Arne Helth

Dresden University of Technology

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L. Schultz

Dresden University of Technology

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S. Scudino

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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K.G. Prashanth

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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