Evidence of Nanometric-Sized Phosphate Clusters in Bioactive Glasses As Revealed by Solid-State <sup>31</sup>P NMR
Аннотация
Bioactive glasses are able to form strong bonds to bone. This property, crucial for medical applications, depends on the glass composition and structure. Dissolution of phosphates in melt-quenched silicate glasses raises the question of chemical homogeneity and possible formation of clusters. A detailed structural characterization of the bioactive glasses is thus highly desirable. In this work, the nature of the distribution of phosphate units in a melt-quenched bioactive glass is elucidated for the first time using 31P spin-counting solid-state NMR experiments. The structure of a dense bioactive calcium silicate glass with 2.6 mol % of phosphorus oxide is shown to exhibit nanometric-sized chemical and structural heterogeneities. Clear experimental evidence of the presence of phosphate clusters of five and six PO4 tetrahedral units embedded in the disordered polymeric silicate network is given.
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