Room-temperature growth of fluorapatite/CaCO3 heterogeneous structured composites inspired by human tooth

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Abstract

Organisms can synthesize heterogeneous structures with excellent mechanical properties through mineralization, the most typical of which are teeth. The tooth is an extraordinarily resilient bi-layered material that is composed of external enamel perpendicular to the tooth surface and internal dentin parallel to the tooth surface. The synthesis of enamel-like heterostructures with good mechanical properties remains an elusive challenge. In this study, we applied a biomimetic mineralization method to grow fluorapatite/CaCO3 (FAP/CaCO3) heterogeneous structured thin films that mimic their biogenic counterparts found in teeth through a three-step pathway: coating a polymer substrate, growing a layered calcite film, and mineralization of a fluorapatite columnar array on the calcite layer. The synthetic heterostructure composites combine well and exhibit good mechanical properties comparable to their biogenic counterparts. The FAP/CaCO3 heterogeneous structured composite exhibits excellent mechanical properties, with a hardness and Young's modulus of 1.99 ± 0.02 GPa and 47.5 ± 0.6 GPa, respectively. This study provides a reasonable new idea for unique heterogeneous structured materials designed at room temperature.

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Li, Y., Ping, H., Lei, L., Xie, J., Zou, Z., Wang, W., … Fu, Z. (2022). Room-temperature growth of fluorapatite/CaCO3 heterogeneous structured composites inspired by human tooth. RSC Advances, 12(18), 11084–11089. https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ra00374k

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