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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Microstructure, mechanical characteristics and cell compatibility of β-tricalcium phosphate reinforced with biodegradable Fe–Mg metal phase
Ronald E. UngerSanjaya SwainC. James KirkpatrickIrena GotmanElazar Y. Gutmanassubject
Calcium PhosphatesMaterials scienceIronComposite numberBiomedical EngineeringSinteringBiocompatible Materials02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistryCeramic matrix composite01 natural sciencesCell LineBiomaterialsFlexural strengthMaterials TestingHumansMagnesiumCeramicComposite materialMechanical PhenomenaOsteoblastsNanocompositeEndothelial Cells021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyMicrostructureNanocrystalline material0104 chemical sciencesMechanics of Materialsvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_medium0210 nano-technologydescription
The use of beta-tricalcium phosphate (β-TCP) ceramic as a bioresorbable bone substitute is limited to non-load-bearing sites by the material׳s brittleness and low bending strength. In the present work, new biocompatible β-TCP-based composites with improved mechanical properties were developed via reinforcing the ceramic matrix with 30 vol% of a biodegradable iron-magnesium metallic phase. β-TCP-15Fe15Mg and β-TCP-24Fe6Mg (vol%) composites were fabricated using a combination of high energy attrition milling, cold sintering/high pressure consolidation of powders at room temperature and annealing at 400 °C. The materials synthesized had a hierarchical nanocomposite structure with a nanocrystalline β-TCP matrix toughened by a finely dispersed nanoscale metallic phase (largely Mg) alongside micron-scale metallic reinforcements (largely Fe). Both compositions exhibited high strength characteristics; in bending, they were about 3-fold stronger than β-TCP reinforced with 30 vol% PLA polymer. Immersion in Ringer׳s solution for 4 weeks resulted in formation of corrosion products on the specimens׳ surface, a few percent weight loss and about 50% decrease in bending strength. In vitro studies of β-TCP-15Fe15Mg composite with human osteoblast monocultures and human osteoblast-endothelial cell co-cultures indicated that the composition was biocompatible for the growth and survival of both cell types and cells exhibited tissue-specific markers for bone formation and angiogenesis, respectively.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-06-21 | Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials |