Abstract

The pathways to crystals are still under debate, especially for materials relevant to biomineralization, such as calcium phosphate apatite known from bone and teeth. Pyrophosphate is widely used in biology to control apatite formation since it is a potent inhibitor of apatite crystallization. The impacts of pyrophosphate on apatite formation and crystallization kinetics are, however, not fully understood. Therefore, we studied apatite crystallization in water by synchrotron in situ X-ray diffraction. Crystallization was conducted from calcium chloride (0.2 M) and sodium phosphate (0.12 M) at pH 12 where hydrogen phosphate is the dominant phosphate species and at 60 °C to allow the synchrotron measurements to be conducted in a timely fashion. Following the formation of an initial amorphous phase, needle shaped crystals formed that had an octacalcium phosphate-like composition, but were too small to display the full 3D periodic structure of octacalcium phosphate. At later growth stages the crystals became apatitic, as revealed by changes in the lattice constant and calcium content. Pyrophosphate strongly inhibited nucleation of apatite and increased the onset of crystallization from minute to hour time scales. Pyrophosphate also reduced the rate of growth. Furthermore, when the pyrophosphate concentration exceeded ~1% of the calcium concentration, the resultant crystals had reduced size anisotropy suggesting that pyrophosphate interacts in a site-specific manner with the formation of apatite crystals.

Highlights

  • The formation of nanocrystalline apatitic biomineral in the skeleton remains far from understood and, many open questions remain about apatite formation in general [1]

  • Pyrophosphate is involved in controlling apatite formation during skeleton formation and is a potent inhibitor of apatite crystallization [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]

  • We use in situ synchrotron powder diffraction [22,23,24,25] to quantify the impact of pyrophosphate on apatite formation from amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP)

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Summary

Introduction

The formation of nanocrystalline apatitic biomineral in the skeleton remains far from understood and, many open questions remain about apatite formation in general [1]. Pyrophosphate is involved in controlling apatite formation during skeleton formation and is a potent inhibitor of apatite crystallization [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]. We have previously shown that the shape and size of the formed apatite nanocrystals depend strongly on whether sodium or potassium salts are used as precursors [26], the pH of the starting solution, e.g., whether it is phosphate or hydrogenphosphate dominated [22,26], and the action of various additives [5,22,24,25,27,28].

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