The mechanical and chemical stability of the interfaces in bioactive materials: The substrate-bioactive surface layer and hydroxyapatite-bioactive surface layer interfaces

Bioactive materials should maintain their properties during implantation and for long time in contact with physiological fluids and tissues. In the present research, five different bioactive materials (a bioactive glass and four different chemically treated bioactive titanium surfaces) have been stu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Materials Science & Engineering C 2020-11, Vol.116, p.111238-111238, Article 111238
Hauptverfasser: Ferraris, S., Yamaguchi, S., Barbani, N., Cristallini, C., Gautier di Confiengo, G., Barberi, J., Cazzola, M., Miola, M., Vernè, E., Spriano, S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bioactive materials should maintain their properties during implantation and for long time in contact with physiological fluids and tissues. In the present research, five different bioactive materials (a bioactive glass and four different chemically treated bioactive titanium surfaces) have been studied and compared in terms of mechanical stability of the surface bioactive layer-substrate interface, their long term bioactivity, the type of hydroxyapatite matured and the stability of the hydroxyapatite-surface bioactive layer interface. Numerous physical and chemical analyses (such as Raman spectroscopy, macro and micro scratch tests, soaking in SBF, Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy equipped with Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), zeta potential measurements and Fourier Transformed Infra-Red spectroscopy (FTIR) with chemical imaging) were used. Scratch measurements evidenced differences among the metallic surfaces concerning the mechanical stability of the surface bioactive layer-substrate interface. All the surfaces, despite of different kinetics of bioactivity, are covered by a bone like carbonate-hydroxyapatite with B-type substitution after 28 days of soaking in SBF. However, the stability of the apatite layer is not the same for all the materials: dissolution occurs at pH around 4 (close to inflammation condition) in a more pronounced way for the surfaces with faster bioactivity together with detachment of the surface bioactive layer. A protocol of characterization is here suggested to predict the implant-bone interface stability. [Display omitted] •There is not a method to characterize interfaces occurring in bioactive materials for bone contact.•Interfaces are among the substrate, bioactive layer and hydroxyapatite grown on it.•Bioactive titanium and bioglass surfaces are here compared with innovative methodology.•Stability of the grown apatite is not the same for all the materials and dissolution can occur.•Detachment of the bioactive oxide layer can also occur together with apatite dissolution.
ISSN:0928-4931
1873-0191
DOI:10.1016/j.msec.2020.111238