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Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization

Highly porous wollastonite-diopside glass-ceramics have been successfully obtained by a new gel-casting technique. The gelation of an aqueous slurry of glass powders was not achieved according to the polymerization of an organic monomer, but as the result of alkali activation. The alkali activation...

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Autores principales: Elsayed, Hamada, Rincón Romero, Acacio, Ferroni, Letizia, Gardin, Chiara, Zavan, Barbara, Bernardo, Enrico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5459145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28772531
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10020171
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author Elsayed, Hamada
Rincón Romero, Acacio
Ferroni, Letizia
Gardin, Chiara
Zavan, Barbara
Bernardo, Enrico
author_facet Elsayed, Hamada
Rincón Romero, Acacio
Ferroni, Letizia
Gardin, Chiara
Zavan, Barbara
Bernardo, Enrico
author_sort Elsayed, Hamada
collection PubMed
description Highly porous wollastonite-diopside glass-ceramics have been successfully obtained by a new gel-casting technique. The gelation of an aqueous slurry of glass powders was not achieved according to the polymerization of an organic monomer, but as the result of alkali activation. The alkali activation of a Ca-Mg silicate glass (with a composition close to 50 mol % wollastonite—50 mol % diopside, with minor amounts of Na(2)O and P(2)O(5)) allowed for the obtainment of well-dispersed concentrated suspensions, undergoing progressive hardening by curing at low temperature (40 °C), owing to the formation of a C–S–H (calcium silicate hydrate) gel. An extensive direct foaming was achieved by vigorous mechanical stirring of partially gelified suspensions, comprising also a surfactant. The open-celled structure resulting from mechanical foaming could be ‘frozen’ by the subsequent sintering treatment, at 900–1000 °C, causing substantial crystallization. A total porosity exceeding 80%, comprising both well-interconnected macro-pores and micro-pores on cell walls, was accompanied by an excellent compressive strength, even above 5 MPa.
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spelling pubmed-54591452017-07-28 Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization Elsayed, Hamada Rincón Romero, Acacio Ferroni, Letizia Gardin, Chiara Zavan, Barbara Bernardo, Enrico Materials (Basel) Article Highly porous wollastonite-diopside glass-ceramics have been successfully obtained by a new gel-casting technique. The gelation of an aqueous slurry of glass powders was not achieved according to the polymerization of an organic monomer, but as the result of alkali activation. The alkali activation of a Ca-Mg silicate glass (with a composition close to 50 mol % wollastonite—50 mol % diopside, with minor amounts of Na(2)O and P(2)O(5)) allowed for the obtainment of well-dispersed concentrated suspensions, undergoing progressive hardening by curing at low temperature (40 °C), owing to the formation of a C–S–H (calcium silicate hydrate) gel. An extensive direct foaming was achieved by vigorous mechanical stirring of partially gelified suspensions, comprising also a surfactant. The open-celled structure resulting from mechanical foaming could be ‘frozen’ by the subsequent sintering treatment, at 900–1000 °C, causing substantial crystallization. A total porosity exceeding 80%, comprising both well-interconnected macro-pores and micro-pores on cell walls, was accompanied by an excellent compressive strength, even above 5 MPa. MDPI 2017-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC5459145/ /pubmed/28772531 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10020171 Text en © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Elsayed, Hamada
Rincón Romero, Acacio
Ferroni, Letizia
Gardin, Chiara
Zavan, Barbara
Bernardo, Enrico
Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization
title Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization
title_full Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization
title_fullStr Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization
title_full_unstemmed Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization
title_short Bioactive Glass-Ceramic Scaffolds from Novel ‘Inorganic Gel Casting’ and Sinter-Crystallization
title_sort bioactive glass-ceramic scaffolds from novel ‘inorganic gel casting’ and sinter-crystallization
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5459145/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28772531
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma10020171
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