Abstract

The development of organic-inorganic hybrids composed of hydroxyapatite and organic polymers is attractive because of their novelty in being materials that show a bone-bonding ability, i.e. bioactivity, and because they have mechanical properties similar to those of natural bone. The biomimetic process has received much attention for fabricating such a hybrid, where bone-like apatite is deposited under ambient conditions on polymer substrates in a simulated body fluid (SBF) having ion concentrations nearly equal to those of human extracellular fluid or related solutions. It has been shown that the carboxyl group is effective for inducing heterogeneous nucleation of apatite in the body. In the present study, apatite deposition on polyamide films containing various numbers of carboxyl groups was investigated in 1.5 SBF, which had ion concentrations 1.5 times those of a normal SBF. The effect of incorporation of calcium chloride on the formation of apatite was examined. Polyamide films containing <or=33 mol % CaCl(2) did not form apatite, even after soaking in 1.5 SBF for 7 days, and even when the polymer film contained 50 mol % carboxyl group. On the other hand, those modified with >or=40 mass % CaCl(2) formed apatite on their surfaces in 1.5 SBF. The ability of the modified film to form an apatite layer increased, and the adhesion of the apatite layer bonded to the film improved, with increasing carboxyl group content. It is concluded that novel apatite-polyamide hybrids can be prepared by a biomimetic process.

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