Data di Pubblicazione:
2004
Abstract:
The system termed 58S is a sol-gel-synthesized bioactive glass composed of SiO2, CaO, and P2O5, used
in medicine as bone prosthetic because, when immersed in a physiological fluid, a layer of hydroxycarbonate
apatite is formed on its surface. The mechanism of bioactive glass 58S carbonation was studied in the
vacuum by means of in-situ FTIR spectroscopy with the use of CO2, H2O, and CD3CN as probe molecules.
The study in the vacuum was necessary to identify both the molecules specifically involved in the carbonation
process and the type of carbonates formed. Bioactive glass 58S was compared to a Ca-doped silica and to
CaO. On CaO, ionic carbonates could form by contact with CO2 alone, whereas on 58S and on Ca-doped
silica carbonation occurred only if both CO2 and an excess ofH2Owere present on the sample. The function
of H2O was not only to block surface cationic sites, so that CO2 could not manifest its Lewis base behavior,
but also to form a liquid-like (mono)layer that allowed the formation of carbonate ions. The presence of
H2O is also supposed to promote Ca2+ migration from the bulk to the surface. Carbonates formed at the
surface of CaO and of Ca-bearing silicas (thus including bioactive glasses) are of the same type, but are
produced through two different mechanisms. The finding that a water excess is necessary to start heavy
carbonation on bioactive glasses seemed to imply that the mechanism leading to in-situ carbonation
simulates, in a simplified and easy-to-reproduce system, what happens both in solution, when carbonates
are incorporated in the apatite layer, and during sample shelf-aging.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Bioactive glasses; silica-based systems; hydroxycarbonate apatite; in situ FTIR spectroscopy; probe molecules
Elenco autori:
CERRUTI M.; MORTERRA C.
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