4.7 Article

Shape control synthesis of fluorapatite structures based on supersaturation: prismatic nanowires, ellipsoids, star, and aggregate formation

Journal

CRYSTENGCOMM
Volume 14, Issue 20, Pages 6384-6389

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c2ce25711d

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  2. Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program at LLNL [09-ERD-029, 11-SI-005]

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Fluorapatite nanostructures of various shapes (prismatic, ellipsoidal, star, and aggregate) were synthesized and their structures correlated with the supersaturation of the system. Reagent concentration and pH were adjusted and the change in supersaturation was simulated by the Geochemist's Workbench (R) software and the MINTEQ database. A higher pH caused changes to the FAP surface charge and was shown to be the dominant force behind aggregate formation. This led to nanorod aggregates and when combined with an increase in reagent concentration, FAP stars were generated. Increasing reaction temperature (room temperature to 100 degrees C) allowed release of calcium by the chelating agent, EDTA, which steadily increased the supersaturation as demonstrated by simulation. This condition led to ellipsoidal nanorods. As the crystal growth continued with an increasing reaction temperature of up to 150 degrees C, ellipsoidal nanorods transformed to prismatic nanowires. This transformation was explained by the decreasing supersaturation of the system as the growth nutrients were consumed. Microwave irradiation, the role of fluorite, and control of monodispersity for the FAP synthesis are also discussed.

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