TY - JOUR
T1 - Ascorbic Acid-Assisted Microwave Synthesis of Mesoporous Ag-Doped Hydroxyapatite Nanorods from Biowaste Seashells for Implant Applications
AU - Karunakaran, Gopalu
AU - Cho, Eun Bum
AU - Kumar, Govindan Suresh
AU - Kolesnikov, Evgeny
AU - Janarthanan, Gopinathan
AU - Pillai, Mamatha Muraleedharan
AU - Rajendran, Selvakumar
AU - Boobalan, Selvakumar
AU - Gorshenkov, Mikhail Vladimirovich
AU - Kuznetsov, Denis
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/5/20
Y1 - 2019/5/20
N2 - Post-surgery implant infection is one of the most challenging issues in orthopedics and it is mainly caused by infective micro-organisms. A potential approach to overcome this issue is developing biomaterials with efficient antibacterial activity. The main intention of this present research is devoted to ascorbic acid-assisted microwave synthesis of mesoporous (silver) Ag-doped hydroxyapatite (HAp) nanorods using biowaste seashells with antibacterial properties. XRD, FTIR, and Raman spectroscopy results revealed that the synthesized nanoparticles are hexagonal crystalline HAp. Further, the silver-doped HAp was also successfully produced without affecting the HAp crystalline phase by forming electrostatic interaction with PO43- ions during the synthesis. The morphological features confirm that the pure HAp is elongated mesoporous nanorods with 20 nm width and 300-500 nm length. However, silver doped HAp nanoparticles such as AgHA-1, AgHA-2, and AgHA-3 are found to be similar mesoporous rods but with different aspect ratios in sizes of 15, 10-15, and 5-10 nm width and 80-100, 10-15, and 20-30 nm length. The BET specific surface areas were obtained as 29 ± 3, 84 ± 2, 87 ± 2, and 128 ± 3 m2 g-1, and pore diameters were 4.68, 4.18, 9.30, and 3.77 nm, respectively, for pure HA, AgHA-1, AgHA-2, and AgHA-3. Therefore, HAp nanoparticles with different dimensions and mesoporous structures could be rapidly prepared using a microwave-assisted method and ascorbic acid as a supporting material. In addition, the synthesized HAp nanoparticles are analyzed for its antibacterial and cytotoxicity studies. The antibacterial and cytotoxicity study clearly reveals that the Ag-doped HAp nanorods are efficiently antibacterial and nontoxic in nature. Hence, it is clear that the ascorbic acid-enabled microwave-assisted method will be one of the best methods for the rapid production of HAp nanoparticles with different dimensions and mesoporous structures for its application as an implant material.
AB - Post-surgery implant infection is one of the most challenging issues in orthopedics and it is mainly caused by infective micro-organisms. A potential approach to overcome this issue is developing biomaterials with efficient antibacterial activity. The main intention of this present research is devoted to ascorbic acid-assisted microwave synthesis of mesoporous (silver) Ag-doped hydroxyapatite (HAp) nanorods using biowaste seashells with antibacterial properties. XRD, FTIR, and Raman spectroscopy results revealed that the synthesized nanoparticles are hexagonal crystalline HAp. Further, the silver-doped HAp was also successfully produced without affecting the HAp crystalline phase by forming electrostatic interaction with PO43- ions during the synthesis. The morphological features confirm that the pure HAp is elongated mesoporous nanorods with 20 nm width and 300-500 nm length. However, silver doped HAp nanoparticles such as AgHA-1, AgHA-2, and AgHA-3 are found to be similar mesoporous rods but with different aspect ratios in sizes of 15, 10-15, and 5-10 nm width and 80-100, 10-15, and 20-30 nm length. The BET specific surface areas were obtained as 29 ± 3, 84 ± 2, 87 ± 2, and 128 ± 3 m2 g-1, and pore diameters were 4.68, 4.18, 9.30, and 3.77 nm, respectively, for pure HA, AgHA-1, AgHA-2, and AgHA-3. Therefore, HAp nanoparticles with different dimensions and mesoporous structures could be rapidly prepared using a microwave-assisted method and ascorbic acid as a supporting material. In addition, the synthesized HAp nanoparticles are analyzed for its antibacterial and cytotoxicity studies. The antibacterial and cytotoxicity study clearly reveals that the Ag-doped HAp nanorods are efficiently antibacterial and nontoxic in nature. Hence, it is clear that the ascorbic acid-enabled microwave-assisted method will be one of the best methods for the rapid production of HAp nanoparticles with different dimensions and mesoporous structures for its application as an implant material.
KW - ascorbic acid
KW - biowaste
KW - implant applications
KW - mesoporous hydroxyapatite
KW - microwave-assisted synthesis
KW - seashells
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85067863027
U2 - 10.1021/acsabm.9b00239
DO - 10.1021/acsabm.9b00239
M3 - Article
C2 - 35030667
AN - SCOPUS:85067863027
SN - 2576-6422
VL - 2
SP - 2280
EP - 2293
JO - ACS Applied Bio Materials
JF - ACS Applied Bio Materials
IS - 5
ER -