Abstract

Biomedical alloys are paramount materials in biomedical applications, particularly in crafting biological artificial replacements. In traditional biomedical alloys, a significant challenge is simultaneously achieving an ultra-low Young's modulus, excellent biocompatibility, and acceptable ductility. A multi-component body-centered cubic (BCC) biomedical high-entropy alloy (Bio-HEA), which is composed of non-toxic elements, is noteworthy for its outstanding biocompatibility and compositional tuning capabilities. Nevertheless, the aforementioned challenges still remain. Here, a method to achieve a single phase with the lowest Young's modulus among the constituent phases by precisely tuning the stability of the BCC phase in the Bio-HEA, is proposed. The subtle tuning of the BCC phase stability also enables the induction of stress-induced martensite transformation with extremely low trigger stress. The transformation-induced plasticity and work hardening capacity are achieved via the stress-induced martensite transformation. Additionally, the hierarchical stress-induced martensite twin structure and crystalline-to-amorphous phase transformation provide robust toughening mechanisms in the Bio-HEA. The cytotoxicity test confirms that this Bio-HEA exhibits excellent biocompatibility without cytotoxicity. In conclusion, this study provides new insights into the development of biomedical alloys with a combination of ultra-low Young's modulus, excellent biocompatibility, and decent ductility.

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