Abstract

AbstractThermal stability of mechanochemically synthesized silicon‐substituted hydroxyapatite containing 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, and 1.2 mol of silicon per mol of apatite unit cell has been studied for the first time. The powders of the silicon‐substituted hydroxyapatite were annealed within the temperature range 700–1300 °C. It was found that the substituted hydroxyapatites remain single‐phase after annealing at temperatures of up to 900 °C for all concentrations of added silicon. The second phase – silicocarnotite Ca5(PO4)2SiO4 – appears in the materials containing 1.0 and 1.2 mol of added silicon that have been annealed at 1000 °C. In the powder containing 0.8 mol of added silicon, silicocarnotite was detected after annealing at 1100 °C. The formation of silicocarnotite is likely to occur in the nanoparticles of the silicon‐substituted hydroxyapatite with silicon concentrations much higher than the average value. It was found that the silicon‐substituted hydroxyapatite containing 0.6 mol of silicon per mol of apatite unit cell has the highest thermal stability and remains single‐phase up to a temperature of 1200 °C, similarly to pure hydroxyapatite obtained by the same synthesis method.

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