| Literature DB >> 25860950 |
Abdul-Rauf Ibrahim1, Xiangyun Li2, Yulan Zhou3, Yan Huang4, Wenwen Chen5, Hongtao Wang6, Jun Li7.
Abstract
The use of cheaper and recyclable biomaterials (like eggshells) to synthesize high purity hydroxyapatite (HAp) with better properties (small particle size, large surface area and pore volume) for applications (in environmental remediation, bone augmentation and replacement, and drug delivery systems) is vital since high-purity synthetic calcium sources are expensive. In this work, pure and mesoporous HAp nanopowder with large pore volume (1.4 cm3/g) and surface area (284.1 m2/g) was produced from raw eggshells at room temperature using a simple two-step procedure. The control of precursor droplets could stabilize the pH value of the reaction solution, because of the size of the needle (of the syringe pump used for precursor additions) leading to production of HAp with high surface area and pore size. The as-produced HAp revealed high ibuprofen (as a model drug) loading (1.38 g/g HAp), enhanced dissolution and controllable release of the drug via solute-saturated supercritical carbon dioxide.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25860950 PMCID: PMC4425061 DOI: 10.3390/ijms16047960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1XRD Patterns of (a) calcite from waste eggshell; hydroxyapatite (Hap) produced using (b) Na2HPO4 and (c) H3PO4 (HAp284PA); and the calcined HAp284PA at (d) 700 °C and (e) 950 °C; bars: HAp reference (ICSD-PDF2: 01-084-1998).
Figure 2SEM images of HAp produced using (a) Na2HPO4 and (b) H3PO4 (HAp284PA); and the calcined HAp284PA at (c) 700 °C and (d) 950 °C.
Results of BET analysis of the produced HAP powders.
| Sample | Surface Area (m2/g) | Pore Volume (cm3/g) | Pore Size (nm) | ACS a (nm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Na2HPO4 | 205.0 | 0.71 | 12.4 | 9 |
| NaH2PO4 | 217.8 | 0.96 | 15.2 | 8 |
| (NH4)3PO4 | 226.9 | 0.85 | 13.0 | 7 |
| H3PO4(HAp284PA) | 284.1 | 1.4 | 17.2 | 7 |
| Calcined at 700 °C | 165.1 | 0.83 | 18.7 | 12 |
| Calcined at 950 °C | 57.1 | 0.47 | 20.2 | 46 |
a Average crystallite size (ACS) was obtained using Jade 6.0 software based on XRD patterns.
Effect of needle size on BET surface area, pore size and crystallite size.
| Needle Size (mm) | Lowest pH b | Surface Area (m2/g) | Pore Volume (cm3/g) | Pore Size (nm) | ACS (nm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.45 × 16 | na c | 9.79 | 154.1 | 0.76 | 19.5 | 7 |
| 0.6 × 25 | na | 9.83 | 162.1 | 0.78 | 18.0 | 8 |
| 0.7 × 32 | 180 | 9.92 | 166.1 | 0.88 | 19.4 | 7 |
| 0.7 × 80 | 150 | 9.92 | 166.8 | 0.93 | 20.0 | 7 |
| 0.8 × 32 | 139 | 9.93 | 169.3 | 0.75 | 16.2 | 8 |
| 0.9 × 38 | 120 | 9.94 | 170.8 | 0.78 | 16.8 | 9 |
| 1.2 × 38 | 98 | 10.00 | 284.1 | 1.39 | 17.2 | 7 |
| 20 × 125 | 46 | 9.97 | 189.4 | 0.61 | 12.1 | 8 |
| 41 × 113 | 44 | 9.95 | 170.9 | 0.83 | 17.9 | 7 |
a ND is the number of drops counted within a minute (drop/min) at 3.33 mL/min (50 mL of phosphoric acid solution added at 200 mL/h into 50 mL of Ca (NO3)2 solution); b the lowest pH values attained for the various reaction solutions (the highest pH value before addition of the phosphoric acid solution was 10.47); c na: drops were so fast that it was not possible to count.
Figure 3XRD patterns for (a) pure ibuprofen; (b) as-HAP (HAp284PA); and (c) ibuprofen-HAp mixture samples.
Figure 4TG curves for the as-produced HAp, pure ibuprofen and ibuprofen loaded samples.
Figure 5Dissolution profiles for ibuprofen raw material and ibuprofen-HAp samples in a simulated gastric fluid.
Figure 6Illustration for the preparation of HAp.
Figure 7Schematic diagram of the solute-saturated supercritical loading process; (1) CO2 cylinder; (2) dryer; (3) back pressure valve; (4) compressor; (5,5’) valves; (6) filter; (7) water bath; (8) loading vessel; (9) tube ; (10) ibuprofen loaded; (11) cotton; (P) pressure gauge.