Issue 10, 1999

The functionalization of titanium with EDTA to induce biomimetic mineralization of hydroxyapatite

Abstract

A new process is developed to functionalize an inorganic substrate with an organic polycarboxylic chelating agent to obtain a biomimetic template for mimicking biomineralization for the synthesis of films or coatings. A titanium plate is first placed in ethylenediaminetetracetic acid (EDTA) solution to effect chemisorption and self-assembly of EDTA molecules on the plate. The plate is then aged in supersaturated hydroxyapatite [(Ca 10 (PO 4 ) 6 (OH) 2 , HA] solution to mimic biomineralization. The functionalization process is found to be very effective in creating a surface with an organized arrangement of carboxylate ions (–COO ) with the orientation of lone pairs of electrons on O perpendicular to or radiating from the substrate surface. The coating is formed through the plate-like outgrowth of HA grains along the [001] direction under the mediation of the functionalized surface, giving rise to the coexistence of two kinds of microstructural patterns in coating. One is a parallel arrangement of the plate-like HA grains with (001) planes preferably parallel to the substrate surface, the other is a radial arrangement of the plate-like HA grains with the [001] direction radiating from one surface core and the (111) planes preferably parallel to the surface. The mineralization mechanism is discussed on the basis of the conformation of the self-assembled EDTA molecules and the interfacial molecular recognition, analogous to the biomineralization, including electrostatic interactions, hydrogen bonding, stereochemical arrangement and geometrical correspondence.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Mater. Chem., 1999,9, 2573-2582

The functionalization of titanium with EDTA to induce biomimetic mineralization of hydroxyapatite

C. Mao, H. Li, F. Cui, Q. Feng and C. Ma, J. Mater. Chem., 1999, 9, 2573 DOI: 10.1039/A901309A

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