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Journal ArticleDOI

Transformation of monetite to hydroxyapatite in bioactive coatings on titanium

TLDR
In this article, a coating of crystalline monetite oriented along the [112] axis was electrochemically deposited on titanium substrates and was subsequently converted to hydroxyapatite by immersion in alkaline solutions.
Abstract
Calcium phosphates have a wide range of pH stability, depending on their Ca/P ratio. Under physiological conditions (pH ≈7), the most stable calcium phosphate is hydroxyapatite, Ca 10 (PO 4 ) 6 (OH) 2 . Acidic calcium phosphates, like dicalcium phosphate, CaHPO 4 (monetite) and dicalcium phosphate dihydrate, CaHPO 4 ·2H 2 O (brushite), are thermodynamically unstable under pH values greater than 6–7 and undergo transformation into more stable calcium phosphates. It means that, when placed in vivo (pH ≈7), acidic calcium phosphates convert to hydroxyapatite. In the present study, a coating of crystalline monetite oriented along the [112] axis was electrochemically deposited on titanium substrates. This monetite coating was subsequently converted to hydroxyapatite by immersion in alkaline solutions. The result was a crystalline hydroxyapatite coating oriented along the [002] axis. Different alkaline solutions produced the same result. Studying the effect of immersion time on the transformation indicated that 4 h were required to complete the conversion from monetite to hydroxyapatite. The transformation occurred by a dissolution–reprecipitation mechanism, i.e. the monetite coating was continuously dissolved and reprecipitated as hydroxyapatite. This combined electrochemical deposition and chemical conversion process produced hydroxyapatite coatings with satisfactory adhesion to the substrate and a thickness between 10 and 30 μm.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium phosphate-based coatings on titanium and its alloys

TL;DR: This review covers briefly the requirements of typical biomaterials and narrowly focuses on the works on titanium, where calcium phosphate ceramics for use in implants are introduced and various methods of producing calcium phosphate coating on titanium substrates are elaborated.
Journal ArticleDOI

TiO2 nanotubes on Ti: Influence of nanoscale morphology on bone cell-materials interaction.

TL;DR: Higher nanometer scale roughness, low contact angle and high surface energy in nanoporous surface enhanced the osteoblast-material interactions, and immunochemistry study with alkaline phosphatase showed enhanced osteoblastic phenotype expressions in nanoporus surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calcium orthophosphate deposits: Preparation, properties and biomedical applications.

TL;DR: A thorough analysis of the available literature has been performed and about 50 deposition techniques of CaPO4 have been revealed, systematized and described, used to improve the surface properties of various types of artificial implants.
Journal Article

Hydroxyapatite coatings: a comparative study between plasma-spray and pulsed laser deposition techniques

TL;DR: The pulsed-laser deposition technique appears to be a very good candidate to replace the plasma Spray in many biomedical applications, because it overcomes most of the drawbacks of the plasma spray.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrochemical preparation of chitosan/hydroxyapatite composite coatings on titanium substrates

TL;DR: Qualitative assessment of the coatings showed adhesion significantly improved over that observed for electrodeposited coatings of pure HA.
References
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Book

An introduction to the bootstrap

TL;DR: This article presents bootstrap methods for estimation, using simple arguments, with Minitab macros for implementing these methods, as well as some examples of how these methods could be used for estimation purposes.
BookDOI

An Introduction to bioceramics

TL;DR: Hench et al. as discussed by the authors described the properties of A/W glass-ceramic processing and properties, T.T. Kokubo and T.H. Yamamuro bioactive glass ceramics - ceravital, U.O. Hench and O. Anderson applications, J. Wilson and R.P.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of hydroxyapatite and carbonated apatite by photo acoustic FTIR spectroscopy

TL;DR: The structure of different commercial synthetic hydroxyapatite powders and a novel carbonated apatite have been studied with photo-acoustic (PAS) Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to understand the interfacial relationship between a bioceramic implant and the adjacent bonet issue.
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