4.8 Article

An X-ray diffraction study of the effects of heat treatment on bone mineral microstructure

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 23, Issue 12, Pages 2577-2585

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0142-9612(01)00395-7

Keywords

bone mineral; X-ray diffraction; microstructure; thermal effects

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A series of human cortical bone specimens has been heated to temperatures up to 1200degreesC and the mineral content examined in detail by X-ray diffraction. Line profile analysis of the diffraction data has been Undertaken to characterise the microstructural (crystallite size and microstrain) features of the mineral at each temperature. Individual profile fitting of several maxima from each diffractogram has also provided precise lattice parameters of the apatite at each temperature. The apatite did not show any significant decomposition over the temperature range although CaO was increasingly formed at temperatures above 600degreesC. Both finite crystallite size and microstrain contributed significantly to the diffraction peak broadening below 600degreesC. When heated to > 800degreesC the small, rod-like mineral crystallites changed from a highly anisotropically strained state to one with significantly larger equidimensional crystals possessing little microstrain. The findings are discussed in the context of graft bone substitutes and surgical heating of bone. (C) 2002 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.

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