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Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane. / Lin, Sen; Ionescu, Claudia; Valliant, Esther M. et al.
In: Journal of Materials Chemistry, Vol. 20, No. 8, 28.02.2010, p. 1489-1496.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Lin, S, Ionescu, C, Valliant, EM, Hanna, JV, Smith, ME & Jones, JR 2010, 'Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane', Journal of Materials Chemistry, vol. 20, no. 8, pp. 1489-1496. https://doi.org/10.1039/B918502J

APA

Lin, S., Ionescu, C., Valliant, E. M., Hanna, J. V., Smith, M. E., & Jones, J. R. (2010). Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane. Journal of Materials Chemistry, 20(8), 1489-1496. https://doi.org/10.1039/B918502J

Vancouver

Lin S, Ionescu C, Valliant EM, Hanna JV, Smith ME, Jones JR. Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane. Journal of Materials Chemistry. 2010 Feb 28;20(8):1489-1496. doi: 10.1039/B918502J

Author

Lin, Sen ; Ionescu, Claudia ; Valliant, Esther M. et al. / Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane. In: Journal of Materials Chemistry. 2010 ; Vol. 20, No. 8. pp. 1489-1496.

Bibtex

@article{c10da5418f24425f986900ecaf1c512d,
title = "Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane",
abstract = "Sol–gel derived bioactive glasses are thought to have high potential as materials for bone regeneration and drug delivery devices. They bond to bone and have a controllable degradation rate. Their unique nanoporosity provides high surface area and exposes a high concentration of surface hydroxyl groups. Protein adsorption, degradation rate and cellular response are known to be affected by nanotopography, therefore it is important to be able to produce glasses with a range of pore sizes. In this study, the modal nanopore diameters of glasses with the bioactive composition 70 mol% SiO2 and 30 mol% CaO (70S30C) were successfully increased from 12 to 30 nm by adding specific amounts of trimethylethoxysilane (TMES) during the sol–gel process. The mechanism of the nanoporosity modification was studied with transmission electron microscopy (TEM), nitrogen sorption and 29Si magic angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Solid-state NMR was used to investigate how the modification processes affected the atomic scale structure of the glass, such as Q structure and network connectivity, which was related to the changes in nanostructure using combinations of nitrogen sorption and TEM. The TMES was found to inhibit the fusion of the nanoparticle structural components of the glasses, causing an increase in pore size.",
author = "Sen Lin and Claudia Ionescu and Valliant, {Esther M.} and Hanna, {John V.} and Smith, {Mark E.} and Jones, {Julian R.}",
year = "2010",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1039/B918502J",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "1489--1496",
journal = "Journal of Materials Chemistry",
issn = "0959-9428",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Tailoring the nanoporosity of sol–gel derived bioactive glass using trimethylethoxysilane

AU - Lin, Sen

AU - Ionescu, Claudia

AU - Valliant, Esther M.

AU - Hanna, John V.

AU - Smith, Mark E.

AU - Jones, Julian R.

PY - 2010/2/28

Y1 - 2010/2/28

N2 - Sol–gel derived bioactive glasses are thought to have high potential as materials for bone regeneration and drug delivery devices. They bond to bone and have a controllable degradation rate. Their unique nanoporosity provides high surface area and exposes a high concentration of surface hydroxyl groups. Protein adsorption, degradation rate and cellular response are known to be affected by nanotopography, therefore it is important to be able to produce glasses with a range of pore sizes. In this study, the modal nanopore diameters of glasses with the bioactive composition 70 mol% SiO2 and 30 mol% CaO (70S30C) were successfully increased from 12 to 30 nm by adding specific amounts of trimethylethoxysilane (TMES) during the sol–gel process. The mechanism of the nanoporosity modification was studied with transmission electron microscopy (TEM), nitrogen sorption and 29Si magic angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Solid-state NMR was used to investigate how the modification processes affected the atomic scale structure of the glass, such as Q structure and network connectivity, which was related to the changes in nanostructure using combinations of nitrogen sorption and TEM. The TMES was found to inhibit the fusion of the nanoparticle structural components of the glasses, causing an increase in pore size.

AB - Sol–gel derived bioactive glasses are thought to have high potential as materials for bone regeneration and drug delivery devices. They bond to bone and have a controllable degradation rate. Their unique nanoporosity provides high surface area and exposes a high concentration of surface hydroxyl groups. Protein adsorption, degradation rate and cellular response are known to be affected by nanotopography, therefore it is important to be able to produce glasses with a range of pore sizes. In this study, the modal nanopore diameters of glasses with the bioactive composition 70 mol% SiO2 and 30 mol% CaO (70S30C) were successfully increased from 12 to 30 nm by adding specific amounts of trimethylethoxysilane (TMES) during the sol–gel process. The mechanism of the nanoporosity modification was studied with transmission electron microscopy (TEM), nitrogen sorption and 29Si magic angle spinning (MAS) solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Solid-state NMR was used to investigate how the modification processes affected the atomic scale structure of the glass, such as Q structure and network connectivity, which was related to the changes in nanostructure using combinations of nitrogen sorption and TEM. The TMES was found to inhibit the fusion of the nanoparticle structural components of the glasses, causing an increase in pore size.

U2 - 10.1039/B918502J

DO - 10.1039/B918502J

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

SP - 1489

EP - 1496

JO - Journal of Materials Chemistry

JF - Journal of Materials Chemistry

SN - 0959-9428

IS - 8

ER -