Whey-derived porous carbon scaffolds for bone tissue engineering

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Abstract

Porous carbon structures derived from whey powders are described and evaluated as potential scaffolds in bone tissue engineering. These materials have a porosity between 48% and 58%, with a hierarchical pore size distribution ranging from 1 to 400 micrometres. Compressive strength and elastic modulus are outstanding for such a porous material, being up to three times better than those of traditional HA or TCP scaffolds with similar porosities. They also present non-cytotoxic and bioactive behavior, due to their carbon-based composition that also includes some residual mineral salts content.

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Llamas-Unzueta, R., Suárez, M., Fernández, A., Díaz, R., Montes-Morán, M. A., & Angel Menéndez, J. (2021). Whey-derived porous carbon scaffolds for bone tissue engineering. Biomedicines, 9(9). https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9091091

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