Abstract

Electrodes made of commercially pure titanium (CP-Ti) and a CoCrMo alloy are immersed at an open circuit in a phosphate buffer saline electrolyte at room temperature for different durations prior to electrochemical analyses. Open circuit potential measurements, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy measurements, and cyclic potentiodynamic polarization (CPP) scans are used to assess the impact of the immersion time on derived property values. Stable passivation layers formed on both materials during immersion. The corrosion potentials determined from the anodic legs of CPP scans become more cathodic, and the corrosion currents decrease to lower values after longer immersion times. Measured currents indicate the layers formed on CP-Ti stabilize during forward anodic scans and persist to the vertex potential, whereas passivation breakdown occurs during anodic scans with CoCrMo with active corrosion at voltages up to the vertex potential. The characteristics of the return cathodic legs of CPP scans represent the surface conditions at the vertex potential: characteristic corrosion property values derived from the test responses represent passive surfaces on CP-Ti and leached surfaces on CoCrMo rather than intrinsic properties of those materials.

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