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Localized Corrosion Studies for Magnesium Implant Devices

MAGPLANT

Project timeline
Start:
September 2016
Duration:
24 months
End:
August 2018
General Information
The MAGPLANT project is intended to provide a major breakthrough towards the fabrication and application of bioresorbable Mg-alloy implants, which have the remarkable potential of accelerating bone healing while transferring the body’s mechanical load from the implant to the regenerating bone, as the Mg-alloy progressively degrades, thereby avoiding multiple surgical interventions. Moreover Mg is highly biocompatible as it is abundantly present in bone tissue and exhibits mechanical properties similar to those of bone. Although there is currently much research on biodegradable Mg implants, the fundamental aspect for achieving success is controlling the corrosion rate of Mg-alloys in biological media. Because the main form of corrosion on Mg is localized corrosion, a thorough study consisting of localized electrochemical measurements must be performed. In the literature the biodegradable Mg is persistently being addressed as suffering from homogeneous corrosion, which is incorrect and does not provide the information on the microscopic processes occurring as the alloy degrades in contact with biofluids and cellular structures. In the scope of MAGPLANT the corrosion of Mg-alloys will be investigated by using modern localized electrochemical techniques. Therefore the underlying Mg-alloy corrosion mechanisms will be understood from the macro to the microscale level, considering the biological environments of interest. This project fits well into the key societal challenges for H2020 and will contribute to improve Europe’s research position on bioresorbable implants. Such perspective is well supported by the excellence and strong dedication of the host institution in the target research field, along with the research experience of the candidate.
This is an individual Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant for Dr. Eduardo Trindade da Silva. Dr. Silva was with the University of Aveiro (UAVR) in Portugal and will maintain close cooperation via secondments with UAVR.
EU-Programme Acronym and Subprogramme AreaH2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Action
Project TypeMSCA Individual Fellowship (IF-EF)
Contract NumberGrant Agreement 703566
Co-ordinatorHelmholtz Zentrum Hereon (DE)
Funding for the Project (€) Funding for Hereon (€)
159,460159,460
Contact Person at Hereon Prof. Mikhail Zheludkevich, Institute of Surface Science, MO, Phone: +49 4152 87 1988
E-mail contact
Worldwide Europe

Participants
Universidade De Aveiro (PT)
Last Update: 18. May 2021