Abstract

Resources recovery of calcium and phosphates from respective green mussel shells and bovine bones by calcination and chemically extracting are viable precursors for carbonate-rich apatite biomedical material applications. Because of their high osteoconductivity, carbonate-rich apatite bioceramics are being studied intensively for synthetic bone transplants. In the study, powder processing routes of calcination and following chemical dissolution in MgCl2 and H2SO4 were each for recovering calcium of mussel shells and phosphate of bovine bones yielding a crystal-forming solution feedstock for use in microwave-irradiated synthesis. FTIR spectra and XRD patterns validated the crystallinity and phase identification for as-synthesized powders. As a result, the presence of CO3, PO43-, and OH- bands in carbonate-calcium phosphate complexes were present in FTIR spectra. According to the XRD Rietveld method, the as-synthesized powder product contained brushite, carbonated hydroxyapatite (CHA), calcite, and gypsum. The recoverable CHA crystallites' size was 40 nm. This present study demonstrated that microwave irradiation synthesis of CHA powder with calcium and phosphates derived from mussel shells and bovine bones is the potential to yield a large amount of CHA for bioceramics and would aid in the design of a powder processing step for preparing the CHA powder precursor in biomedical applications.

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