Issue 28, 2013

Biomimetic calcium–phosphates produced by an auto-catalytic route on stainless steel 316L and bio-inert polyolefin

Abstract

A melange of hydroxyapatite and calcium phosphate hydrate coatings have been deposited on the surfaces of 316L type stainless steel and polyolefin (PP-PE), both components of 316L/PP-PE/316L sandwich, by an auto-catalytic route using an acidic bath. Coatings on 316L are made of spherules size ranged from 100 nm to 1 μm while those observed on PP-PE are smaller in the 50–600 nm range. Cell viability is much higher in samples with novel auto-catalytic layer of Ca–P than in the uncoated ones. Furthermore, our results show that the Ca–P coating produced by an auto-catalytic route act as promoter for osteoblasts proliferation. Osteoblasts morphology investigated by immunofluorescence proves that they are attached and well spread confirming the cytocompatibility.

Graphical abstract: Biomimetic calcium–phosphates produced by an auto-catalytic route on stainless steel 316L and bio-inert polyolefin

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Dec 2012
Accepted
21 Mar 2013
First published
07 May 2013

RSC Adv., 2013,3, 11255-11262

Biomimetic calcium–phosphates produced by an auto-catalytic route on stainless steel 316L and bio-inert polyolefin

V. Q. Le, A. Cochis, L. Rimondini, G. Pourroy, V. Stanic, H. Palkowski and A. Carradò, RSC Adv., 2013, 3, 11255 DOI: 10.1039/C3RA23385E

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