TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultrasonic-assisted chemical etching of zinc-based alloy porous structures
T2 - Surface morphology evolution and mechanical property response
AU - Shi, Wentian
AU - Cao, Shangguo
AU - Xie, Lijing
AU - Li, Jie
AU - Pan, Chao
AU - Zhang, Xiaoqing
AU - Guo, Biao
AU - Jiang, Wensong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Additive manufactured zinc-based porous implants face the critical challenges of residual powder adhesion and high surface roughness, and traditional post-processing techniques are difficult to achieve uniform modification without sacrificing mechanical properties.This study employs a novel strategy of ultrasonic-assisted chemical etching (UACE), leveraging the synergistic effects of ultrasonic cavitation and chemical etching to achieve efficient removal of residual powder, surface homogenization, and preservation of mechanical properties, thereby effectively resolving the inherent conflict between surface quality and structural integrity. For Zn, Zn-0.5Mg and Zn-Mg-Cu porous structures, the optimized UACE process (10 % HCl+10 % HNO3, 50 s) can remove Zn-Mg-Cu residual powders up to 40.38 %, and significantly reduce the surface roughness (Ra) from 10.37 µm to 5.43 µm for Zn-0.5Mg, and at the same time, the structural size and energy absorption capacity were retained up to 91.6 % and 76.1 %, respectively. This study not only provides a new paradigm for the precision post-processing of complex metal porous components, but also lays a key foundation for the clinical application of high-performance biodegradable zinc-based implants.
AB - Additive manufactured zinc-based porous implants face the critical challenges of residual powder adhesion and high surface roughness, and traditional post-processing techniques are difficult to achieve uniform modification without sacrificing mechanical properties.This study employs a novel strategy of ultrasonic-assisted chemical etching (UACE), leveraging the synergistic effects of ultrasonic cavitation and chemical etching to achieve efficient removal of residual powder, surface homogenization, and preservation of mechanical properties, thereby effectively resolving the inherent conflict between surface quality and structural integrity. For Zn, Zn-0.5Mg and Zn-Mg-Cu porous structures, the optimized UACE process (10 % HCl+10 % HNO3, 50 s) can remove Zn-Mg-Cu residual powders up to 40.38 %, and significantly reduce the surface roughness (Ra) from 10.37 µm to 5.43 µm for Zn-0.5Mg, and at the same time, the structural size and energy absorption capacity were retained up to 91.6 % and 76.1 %, respectively. This study not only provides a new paradigm for the precision post-processing of complex metal porous components, but also lays a key foundation for the clinical application of high-performance biodegradable zinc-based implants.
KW - Mechanical properties
KW - Porous structure
KW - Surface morphology
KW - Ultrasonic-assisted chemical etching
KW - Zinc-based alloy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013985322
U2 - 10.1016/j.mtcomm.2025.113629
DO - 10.1016/j.mtcomm.2025.113629
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105013985322
SN - 2352-4928
VL - 48
JO - Materials Today Communications
JF - Materials Today Communications
M1 - 113629
ER -