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Apatite formation on silica gel in simulated body fluid: Its dependence on structures of silica gels prepared in different media

✍ Scribed by Cho, Sung-Baek ;Nakanishi, Kazuki ;Kokubo, Tadashi ;Soga, Naohiro ;Ohtsuki, Chikara ;Nakamura, Takashi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
694 KB
Volume
33
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9304

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✦ Synopsis


It has been shown that the prerequisite for glasses and glass-ceramics to bond to living bone is the formation of a layer of biologically active bonelike apatite on their surfaces. The hydrated silica formed on the surfaces of glasses and glass-ceramics plays an important role in nucleating the apatite. In the present study, the structure of the hydrated silica responsible for the apatite nucleation was investigated in an accellular simulated body fluid with ion concentrations nearly equal to those of human blood plasma. Three kinds of porous silica gels were prepared by hydrolysis and polycondensation of tetraethoxysilane in pure water or in aqueous solution containing polyethylene glycol or polyacrylic acid. The silica gels prepared in aqueous solution containing polyethylene glycol or polyacrylic acid had micron-size interconnected pores, whereas the gel prepared in pure water did not. All the gels contained a large volume of nanometer-size pores, almost the same amounts of silanol groups and D2 defect, and showed a high dissolution rate of the silica. Despite this, only the gel prepared in the solution containing polyethylene glycol formed the apatite on its surface in the simulated body fluid. This indicates that only a certain type of structural unit of the silanol group is responsible for the apatite nucleation.


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## Abstract The apatite‐forming ability of titania gels with different structures has been investigated in a simulated body fluid with ion concentrations nearly equal to those of human blood plasma. Titania gels with an amorphous structure or with an anatase or rutile structure were prepared by the