| Literature DB >> 26249592 |
Nida Iqbal Khan1, Kashif Ijaz2, Muniza Zahid2, Abdul S Khan2, Mohammed Rafiq Abdul Kadir3, Rafaqat Hussain4, Jawwad A Darr5, Aqif A Chaudhry6.
Abstract
Hydroxyapatite is used extensively in hard tissue repair due to its biocompatibility and similarity to biological apatite, the mineral component of bone. It differs subtly in composition from biological apatite which contains other ions such as magnesium, zinc, carbonate and silicon (believed to play biological roles). Traditional methods of hydroxyapatite synthesis are time consuming and require strict reaction parameter control. This paper outlines synthesis of magnesium substituted hydroxyapatite using simple microwave irradiation of precipitated suspensions. Microwave irradiation resulted in a drastic decrease in ageing times of amorphous apatitic phases. Time taken to synthesize hydroxyapatite (which remained stable upon heat treatment at 900°C for 1h) reduced twelve folds (to 2h) as compared to traditionally required times. The effects of increasing magnesium concentration in the precursors on particle size, surface area, phase-purity, agglomeration and thermal stability, were observed using scanning electron microscopy, BET surface area analysis, X-ray diffraction and photo acoustic Fourier transform infra-red spectroscopy. Porous agglomerates were obtained after a brief heat-treatment (1h) at 900°C.Entities:
Keywords: Bioceramics; Calcium phosphates; Magnesium substitution; Microwave synthesis
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26249592 DOI: 10.1016/j.msec.2015.05.025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mater Sci Eng C Mater Biol Appl ISSN: 0928-4931 Impact factor: 7.328