Gamma irradiated synthetic hydroxyapatite, bone substituting materials NanoBone® and HA Biocer were examined using EPR spectroscopy and compared with powdered human compact bone. In every case, radiation- induced carbon centered radicals were recorded, but their molecular structures and concentrations differed. In compact bone and synthetic hydroxyapatite the main signal assigned to the CO2- anion radical was stable, whereas the signal due to the CO33- radical dominated in NanoBone® and HA Biocer just after irradiation. However, after a few days of storage of these samples, also a CO2 - signal was recorded. The EPR study of irradiated compact bone and the synthetic graft materials suggest that their microscopic structures are different. In FT-IR spectra of NanoBone®, HA Biocer and synthetic hydroxyapatite the HPO4 2- and CO32- in B-site groups are detected, whereas in compact bone signals due to collagen dominate. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Sadlo, J., Strzelczak, G., Lewandowska-Szumiel, M., Sterniczuk, M., Pajchel, L., & Michalik, J. (2012). Carbon-centered radicals in c-irradiated bone substituting biomaterials based on hydroxyapatite. Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine, 23(9), 2061–2068. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10856-012-4680-9
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