Tailoring surface nanostructures on polyaryletherketones for load-bearing implants

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Abstract

High-performance thermoplastics including polyetheretherketone (PEEK) are key biomaterials for load-bearing implants. Plasma treatment of implants surfaces has been shown to chemically activate its surface, which is a prerequisite to achieve proper cell attachment. Oxygen plasma treatment of PEEK films results in very reproducible surface nanostructures and has been reported in the literature. Our goal is to apply the plasma treatment to another promising polymer, polyetherketoneketone (PEKK), and compare its characteristics to the ones of PEEK. Oxygen plasma treatments of plasma powers between 25 and 150 W were applied on 60 ìmthick PEKK and 100 ìm-thick PEEK films. Analysis of the nanostructures by atomic force microscopy showed that the roughness increased and island density decreased with plasma power for both PEKK and PEEK films correlating with contact angle values without affecting bulk properties of the used films. Thermal analysis of the plasma-treated films shows that the plasma treatment does not change the bulk properties of the PEKK and PEEK films. © 2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston.

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APA

Urwylera, P., Zhaob, X., Pascual, A., Schift, H., & Müller, B. (2014). Tailoring surface nanostructures on polyaryletherketones for load-bearing implants. European Journal of Nanomedicine, 6(1), 37–46. https://doi.org/10.1515/ejnm-2014-0006

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