Abstract
An original shaping technique has been applied to prepare porous bodies at room temperature. Agarose, a biodegradable polysaccharide, was added as binder of a sol-gel glass in powder form, yielding an easy to mold paste. Interconnected tailored porous bodies can be straight-forwardly prepared by pouring the slurry into a polymeric scaffold, previously designed by stereolitography, which is subsequently eliminated by alkaline dissolution at room temperature. The so obtained pieces behave like a hydrogel with an enhanced consistency that makes them machinable and easy to manipulate. These materials generate an apatite-like layer when immersed in a simulated body fluid, indicating a potential in vivo bioactivity. The proposed method can be applied to different powdered materials to produce pieces, at room temperature, with various shapes and sizes and with tailored interconnected porosity. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Cabañas, M. V., Peña, J., Román, J., & Vallet-Regí, M. (2006). Room temperature synthesis of agarose/sol-gel glass pieces with tailored interconnected porosity. Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part A, 78(3), 508–514. https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.a.30724
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