Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5358484 Applied Surface Science 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
Alkali-treated titanium surfaces have earlier shown to induce bone-like apatite deposition. In the present study, the effect of surface topography of two-dimensional and pore architecture of three-dimensional alkali-treated titanium substrates on the in vitro bioactivity was investigated. Titanium plates with a surface roughness of Ra = 0.13 μm, 0.56 μm, 0.83 μm, and 3.63 μm were prepared by Al2O3 grit-blasting. Simple tetragonal and face-centered Ti6Al4V scaffolds with spatial gaps of 450-1100 μm and 200-700 μm, respectively, were fabricated by a three-dimensional fiber deposition (3DFD) technique. After alkali treatment, the titanium plates with a surface roughness of Ra = 0.56 μm were completely covered with hydroxyapatite globules after 7 days in simulated body fluid (SBF), while the coverage of the samples with other surface roughness values remained incomplete. Similarly, face-centered Ti6Al4 scaffolds with spatial gaps of 200-700 μm exhibited a full surface coverage after 21 days in SBF, while simple tetragonal scaffolds with spatial gaps of 450-1100 μm were only covered for 45-65%. This indicates the importance of surface topography and pore architecture for in vitro bioactivity.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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