4.7 Article

Bioactive glass-reinforced bioceramic ink writing scaffolds: sintering, microstructure and mechanical behavior

期刊

BIOFABRICATION
卷 7, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1758-5090/7/3/035010

关键词

ceramic ink writing; bioceramics; porous scaffolds; mechanical reinforcement; BG-assisted sintering

资金

  1. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LZ14E020001, LQ14H060003]
  2. Science Fund for Creative Research Groups of National Natural Science Foundation of China [51221004]
  3. Science and Technology Department of Zhejiang Province Foundation [2015C33119]
  4. National Science Foundation of China [51375440, 81271956, 51372218]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The densification of pore struts in bioceramic scaffolds is important for structure stability and strength reliability. An advantage of ceramic ink writing is the precise control over the microstructure and macroarchitecture. However, the use of organic binder in such ink writing process would heavily affect the densification of ceramic struts and sacrifice the mechanical strength of porous scaffolds after sintering. This study presents a low-melt-point bioactive glass (BG)-assisted sintering strategy to overcome the main limitations of direct ink writing (extrusion-based three-dimensional printing) and to produce high-strength calcium silicate (CSi) bioceramic scaffolds. The 1% BG-added CSi (CSi-BG1) scaffolds with rectangular pore morphology sintered at 1080 degrees C have a very small BG content, readily induce apatite formation, and show appreciable linear shrinkage (similar to 21%), which is consistent with the composite scaffolds with less or more BG contents sintered at either the same or a higher temperature. These CSi-BG1 scaffolds also possess a high elastic modulus (similar to 350 MPa) and appreciable compressive strength (similar to 48 MPa), and show significant strength enhancement after exposure to simulated body fluid-a performance markedly superior to those of pure CSi scaffolds. Particularly, the honeycomb-pore CSi-BG1 scaffolds show markedly higher compressive strength (similar to 88 MPa) than the scaffolds with rectangular, parallelogram, and Archimedean chord pore structures. It is suggested that this approach can potentially facilitate the translation of ceramic ink writing and BG-assisted sintering of bioceramic scaffold technologies to the in situ bone repair.

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