31P and 1H powder ENDOR and molecular orbital study of a CO33– ion in X-irradiated carbonate containing hydroxyapatites
Abstract
An X-irradiated synthetic carbonate-containing apatite powder is examined with EPR and ENDOR. At low microwave powers, the room-temperature EPR spectrum contains a major contribution of a signal with g values: gx= 2.0045, gy= 2.0034 and gz= 2.0014. In a related 13C-enriched sample, the radical was shown to exhibit a hyperfine interaction with one carbon nucleus. The 13C hyperfine tensor values are: Ax= 263 MHz, Ay= 263 MHz and Az= 423MHz. The radical is assigned to a CO33– molecular ion. It is demonstrated by means of CNDO/II and INDO calculations that by lowering the symmetry of the CO33– ion from C3v to Cs, an orthorhombic g tensor can be obtained. However, the deviation from axial symmetry for the 13C hyperfine tensor is so small that it is not measurable on a powder specimen. The thus-calculated spin-Hamiltonian parameters are in very good qualitative and quantitative agreement with the experimental ones, adding strong evidence for the assignment of the observed signal to a CO33– radical.
At low temperatures, both 31P and 1H ENDOR spectra are recorded for different settings of the magnetic field (i.e. when the magnetic field is swept through the EPR CO33– spectrum). By a careful analysis of the ENDOR powder spectra using computer simulations based on the ‘orientation-selection’ principle, a detailed model for the CO33– ion could be proposed. In this way, it is established unambiguously that the CO33– ion substitutes for a phosphate group in the hydroxyapatite lattice, with a vacancy on the nearest hydroxy-group site. In addition, some deductions can be made about the substitution mechanism according to which the precursor of the CO33– radical (i.e. a carbonate ion) is incorporated into the apatitic lattice.