Literature DB >> 32377851

Pulsed laser deposition temperature effects on strontium-substituted hydroxyapatite thin films for biomedical implants.

Angela De Bonis1, Vuk Uskoković2, Katia Barbaro3, Inna Fadeeva4, Mariangela Curcio1, Luca Imperatori5, Roberto Teghil1, Julietta V Rau6.   

Abstract

Substituting small molecule drugs with abundant and easily affordable ions may have positive effects on the way countless disease treatments are approached. The interest in strontium cation in bone therapies soared in the wake of the success of strontium ranelate in the treatment of osteoporosis. A new method for producing thin strontium-containing hydroxyapatite (Sr-HA, Ca9Sr(PO4)6(OH)2) films as coatings that render bioinert titanium implant bioactive is reported here. The method is based on the combination of a mechanochemical synthesis of Sr-HA targets and their deposition in form of thin films on top of titanium with the use of laser ablation at low pressure. The films were 1-2 μm in thickness and their formation was studied at different temperatures, including 25, 300, and 500 °C. Highly crystalline Sr-HA target transformed during pulsed laser deposition to a fully amorphous film, whose degree of long-range order recovered with temperature. Particle edges became somewhat sharper and surface roughness moderately increased with temperature, but the (Ca+Sr)/P atomic ratio, which increased 1.5 times during the film formation, remained approximately constant at different temperatures. Despite the mostly amorphous structure of the coatings, their affinity for capturing atmospheric carbon dioxide and accommodating it as carbonate ions that replace both phosphates and hydroxyls of HA was confirmed in an X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic analysis. As the film deposition temperature increased, the lattice voids got reduced in concentration and the structure gradually "closed," becoming more compact and entailing a linear increase in microhardness with temperature, by 0.03 GPa/°C for the entire 25-500 °C range. Biocompatibility and bioactivity of Sr-HA thin films deposited on titanium were confirmed in an interaction with dental pulp stem cells, suggesting that these coatings, regardless of the processing temperature, may be viable candidates for the surface components of metallic bone implants.

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Keywords:  Bioactivity; Biocompatibility; Biomedical implants; Dental pulp stem cells; Pulsed laser deposition; Strontium-substituted hydroxyapatite; Thin films

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32377851     DOI: 10.1007/s10565-020-09527-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Biol Toxicol        ISSN: 0742-2091            Impact factor:   6.691


  2 in total

1.  LIPSS Applied to Wide Bandgap Semiconductors and Dielectrics: Assessment and Future Perspectives.

Authors:  Matteo Mastellone; Maria Lucia Pace; Mariangela Curcio; Nicola Caggiano; Angela De Bonis; Roberto Teghil; Patrizia Dolce; Donato Mollica; Stefano Orlando; Antonio Santagata; Valerio Serpente; Alessandro Bellucci; Marco Girolami; Riccardo Polini; Daniele Maria Trucchi
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-13       Impact factor: 3.623

2.  Influence of Synthesis Conditions on Gadolinium-Substituted Tricalcium Phosphate Ceramics and Its Physicochemical, Biological, and Antibacterial Properties.

Authors:  Inna V Fadeeva; Dina V Deyneko; Katia Barbaro; Galina A Davydova; Margarita A Sadovnikova; Fadis F Murzakhanov; Alexander S Fomin; Viktoriya G Yankova; Iulian V Antoniac; Sergey M Barinov; Bogdan I Lazoryak; Julietta V Rau
Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-03       Impact factor: 5.076

  2 in total

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