Abstract

In bone tissue engineering (BTE), defects in large bones remain the greatest issue which can be addressed using bone scaffolds. In this work, blends of heat cured polymethylmethacrylate (HC PMMA) and various weight percentages of poly-ether-ketone-ketone (PEKK) (0, 2, 4, 8, and 10%) were made using a porogen leaching process. The blends were then subjected to tensile, compression and bending tests to select the optimum blend. Based on the results obtained, HC PMMA blended with 2 wt% PEKK was selected to produce the bio-porous blends. Here, the porosity was imparted using tartaric acid (C4H6O6) and sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) as porogen leaching components. Porous blends resulted were then reinforced with a nano titanium dioxide powder (nTiO2) at different weight percentages of (0, 1, 3, and 5). The results showed that porous composites made of (HC PMMA: 2 wt% PEKK) blend reinforced with 5 wt % nTiO2 exhibit the highest strength values under various loadings.The FTIR identified the functional groups of the bone scaffold components. The mean pore size and pore depth were measured using atomic force microscopy (AFM) analysis and the values are 92.6 nm and 42.78 nm, respectively. The good distribution of the PEKK and nTiO2 within the HC PMMA and the uniform porous structure with multi-scale pores between 535 nm and 1.187 mm were confirmed by the AFM data and SEM images, respectively. This research expected that the porous composite (HC PMMA: 2% PEKK: 5% nTiO2) is a good candidate for bone scaffold applications.

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