Preparation and characterisation of monoclinic hydroxyapatite and its precipitated carbonate apatite intermediate

H. Morgan, R.M. Wilson, J.C. Elliott, S.E.P. Dowker, P. Anderson

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Five 100 g batches of a carbonate apatite (the intermediate) were produced by heating an aqueous slurry of CaCO3 and CaHPO4 with an overall Ca/P mole ratio of 5/3 with vigorous stirring. Each intermediate produced by boiling off water was heated in vacuum at 1100°C to remove carbonate, then steamed at 900°C to ensure complete hydroxylation. Comparison of calculated and observed X-ray diffraction patterns showed final products containing 50-100 wt% monoclinic hydroxyapatite (remainder hexagonal). Rietveld refinements in P63/m gave structures similar to several hydroxyapatite standards, including NIST SRM 2910, although there was no evidence from X-ray diffraction that the latter was in the monoclinic form. Refinements from standards and final products were slightly different from published single crystal data for Holly Springs hydroxyapatite. This is attributed to known impurities in mineral hydroxyapatite and indicates that parameters from the Rietveld refinements are closer to the true values for pure hydroxyapatite. Rietveld refinements for intermediates showed small, but significant differences from the final product, the largest being in O1x, O2x and O(H)z. All P-O bond lengths were shorter than in the final product, resulting in a 3.2% lower PO4 tetrahedron volume. The occupancies of P and Ca(2) were reduced. These differences are attributed to partial replacement of PO43- by CO32- ions.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)617-627
    JournalBiomaterials
    Volume21
    Issue number6
    Early online date11 Feb 2000
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 31 Mar 2000

    Bibliographical note

    Note: This work was supported by the Medical Research Council [grant number: G9505593MA].

    Keywords

    • Monoclinic hydroxyapatite
    • Rietveld analysis
    • Carbonate apatite
    • INEL CPS-120 detector
    • Dentistry

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Preparation and characterisation of monoclinic hydroxyapatite and its precipitated carbonate apatite intermediate'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this