Abstract

Graphene oxide (GO) was firstly employed as nanoscale reinforcement fillers in hydroxyapatite (HA) coatings by a cathodic electrophoretic deposition process, and GO/HA coatings were fabricated on pure Ti substrate. The transmission electron microscopy observation and particle size analysis of the suspensions indicated that HA nanoparticles were uniformly decorated on GO sheets, forming a large GO/HA particle group. The addition of GO into HA coatings could reduce the surface cracks and increase the coating adhesion strength from 1.55±0.39MPa (pure HA) to 2.75±0.38MPa (2 wt.% GO/HA) and 3.3±0.25MPa (5 wt.% GO/HA), respectively. Potentiodynamic polarization and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy studies indicated that the GO/HA composite coatings exhibited higher corrosion resistance in comparison with pure HA coatings in simulated body fluid. In addition, superior (around 95% cell viability for 2 wt.% GO/HA) or comparable (80–90% cell viability for 5 wt.% GO/HA) in vitro biocompatibility were observed in comparison with HA coated and uncoated Ti substrate.

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