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Grain boundary corrosion in TiO2 bone scaffolds doped with group II cations

Abstract

A pH drop during the inflammatory phase during bone regeneration can cause corrosion in TiO2 bone scaffolds and the loss of compressive strength. Corrosion as ion leaching and dissolution is confined to grain boundaries. Cationic doping of TiO2 showed to increase the compressive strength but increased the amount of impurities in grain boundaries as well. Therefore, this study showed the different grain boundary formation for Ca, Sr and Mg doped scaffolds and their corrosion behavior. After corrosion, the amorphous phase in grain boundaries was dissolved in all doped scaffolds. Differences occurred due to the formation of an additional crystalline phase in Sr doped scaffolds. The presence of an amorphous and crystalline phase led to an inhomogeneous dissolution in grain boundaries and a significant decrease in compressive strength already after 4 h in contact with an acidic environment. Released ions did not show any cytotoxic effect on hASCs. Mg doped TiO2 scaffolds led to significant increased osteogenic differentiation.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Anne Klemm
  • Manuel Gomez-Florit
  • Patricia Almeida Carvalho
  • Mattis Wachendörfer
  • Manuela E. Gomes
  • Håvard Jostein Haugen
  • Hanna Tiainen

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Industry / Sustainable Energy Technology
  • Portugal
  • University of Minho
  • RWTH Aachen University
  • University of Oslo

Year

2019

Published in

Journal of the European Ceramic Society

ISSN

0955-2219

Volume

39

Page(s)

1577 - 1585

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository