Abstract

Calcium orthophosphates (CaP) constitute an important group of biomaterials used in bone repair and tooth remineralization. In some applications, controlling particle surface area and/or dimensions is important to fine-tune ion release kinetics. This study evaluated the interaction between synthesis temperature (22 °C or 45 °C) and reactant concentration (“Low”: 0.1 mol.L−1, “Medium”: 0.5 mol.L−1 or “High”: 1.0 mol.L−1) on phase formation, particle morphology, size and surface area. Calcium and phosphate precursor solutions (Ca/P = 1.0, initial pH: 7.9–8.1) were mixed and the precipitate was obtained after 24 h. DCPD (CaHPO4·2H2O) was the only phase identified by X-ray diffraction at 22 °C/Medium and 22 °C/High, with large plate crystal morphology, while DCPD/OCP (Ca4H(PO4)3·2.5H2O, as agglomerates of sub-micron crystals) mixtures were observed at 22 °C/Low, 45 °C/Medium and 45 °C/High. Small-plate, low-crystallinity HAP (Ca5OH(PO4)3) was obtained at 45 °C/Low. In spite of the different morphologies, particle hydrodynamic radius (as determined by laser light scattering) was not affected by the tested variables (median: 10–20 μm). Surface area, on the other hand, varied according to particle morphology (37–135 m2/g). In conclusion, temperature and reactant concentration interacted to define the precipitated phases, each of them with a characteristic morphology. Thermodynamically more stable phases (OCP or HAP) were found in syntheses conducted at 45 °C due to accelerated DCPD hydrolysis.

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