Investigation of calcium phosphate formation from calcium propionate and triethyl phosphate
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2016

Synthetic calcium phosphates are used in for example bone cements and implant coatings to increase biocompatibility. The common method to produce tricalcium phosphate (TCP) uses high temperatures, which creates large crystals with low specific surface areas. In order to investigate new methods to produce TCP at lower temperatures, the reaction between calcium propionate and triethyl phosphate conducted at 220 degrees C was studied. The method had a near 100% conversion rate, the main synthesis products were calcium phosphate and ethyl propionate. The formed calcium phosphate polymorph could be controlled depending on the water content of the precursor mixture. Anhydrous conditions created amorphous calcium phosphate. As the concentration of water increased, beta-TCP was formed, followed by calcium deficient hydroxyapatite and monetite. The particle size increased with the water content, from 20 to 40 nm for amorphous calcium phosphate to tenths of micrometers for monetite. The specific surface areas varied between 209 m(2)/g for the amorphous product to 3.6 m(2)/g for the monetite product.

TCP

crystal

Bone cements

Materials Science

regeneration

Calcium phosphates

hydrothermal synthesis

hydroxyapatite

Nanocrystals

beta-tricalcium-phosphate

Författare

P. Kjellin

AstraZeneca Sweden

Anand Kumar Rajasekharan

Chalmers, Kemi och kemiteknik, Tillämpad kemi

F Currie

AstraZeneca Sweden

P. Handa

AstraZeneca Sweden

Ceramics International

0272-8842 (ISSN)

Vol. 42 12 14061-14065

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2011)

Keramteknik

DOI

10.1016/j.ceramint.2016.06.013

Mer information

Skapat

2017-10-07