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Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass

P(2)O(5)–SiO(2)–Na(2)O–CaO glasses are promising therapeutic ion-releasing materials. Herein, we investigated the state of silicon (Si) in P(2)O(5)–SiO(2)–Na(2)O–CaO glass using a model with a composition of 55.0P(2)O(5)–21.3SiO(2)–23.7Na(2)O (mol%), incorporating a six-fold-coordinated silicon stru...

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Autores principales: Takada, Kazuya, Tamura, Tomoyuki, Kasuga, Toshihiro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9727683/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36540251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra06707b
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author Takada, Kazuya
Tamura, Tomoyuki
Kasuga, Toshihiro
author_facet Takada, Kazuya
Tamura, Tomoyuki
Kasuga, Toshihiro
author_sort Takada, Kazuya
collection PubMed
description P(2)O(5)–SiO(2)–Na(2)O–CaO glasses are promising therapeutic ion-releasing materials. Herein, we investigated the state of silicon (Si) in P(2)O(5)–SiO(2)–Na(2)O–CaO glass using a model with a composition of 55.0P(2)O(5)–21.3SiO(2)–23.7Na(2)O (mol%), incorporating a six-fold-coordinated silicon structure (([6])Si). The model was constructed using a classical molecular dynamics method and relaxed using the first-principles method. Further, we experimentally prepared glasses, substituting Na(2)O for CaO, to investigate the dissolution of glass with varying ([6])Si and PO(4) tetrahedra (Q(P)(n)) distributions (n = number of bridging oxygens (BOs) to neighboring tetrahedra). ([6])Si in the glass model preferentially coordinated with Q(P)(3). When Si was surrounded by phosphate groups, phosphorus (P) induced the formation of ([6])Si by elongating the Si–O distance, and ([6])Si acted like a glass network former (NWF). Na(+) coordinated with ([6])Si–O–P bonds via electrostatic interactions with BO. (31)P and (29)Si magic-angle-spinning-nuclear-magnetic-resonance spectra of three experimental glass samples with the compositions of 55.0P(2)O(5)–21.3SiO(2)–xCaO–(23.7 − x)Na(2)O (mol%, x = 0, 12.4, and 23.7) showed that Q(P)(3) and ([6])Si increased with increasing Na(2)O. When each glass powder was immersed in a tris-HCl buffer solution at 37 °C, the dissolution of NWF ions and network modifier (NWM) ions increased almost monotonically with time for all samples, indicating that the solubility of the samples was suppressed by the coexistence of CaO and Na(2)O, attributed to the delocalization of the electron distribution of P in the ([6])Si-coordinated Q(P)(3) units compared to that in the P- or ([4])Si-coordinated Q(P)(3) units, which reduces hydrolysis.
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spelling pubmed-97276832022-12-19 Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass Takada, Kazuya Tamura, Tomoyuki Kasuga, Toshihiro RSC Adv Chemistry P(2)O(5)–SiO(2)–Na(2)O–CaO glasses are promising therapeutic ion-releasing materials. Herein, we investigated the state of silicon (Si) in P(2)O(5)–SiO(2)–Na(2)O–CaO glass using a model with a composition of 55.0P(2)O(5)–21.3SiO(2)–23.7Na(2)O (mol%), incorporating a six-fold-coordinated silicon structure (([6])Si). The model was constructed using a classical molecular dynamics method and relaxed using the first-principles method. Further, we experimentally prepared glasses, substituting Na(2)O for CaO, to investigate the dissolution of glass with varying ([6])Si and PO(4) tetrahedra (Q(P)(n)) distributions (n = number of bridging oxygens (BOs) to neighboring tetrahedra). ([6])Si in the glass model preferentially coordinated with Q(P)(3). When Si was surrounded by phosphate groups, phosphorus (P) induced the formation of ([6])Si by elongating the Si–O distance, and ([6])Si acted like a glass network former (NWF). Na(+) coordinated with ([6])Si–O–P bonds via electrostatic interactions with BO. (31)P and (29)Si magic-angle-spinning-nuclear-magnetic-resonance spectra of three experimental glass samples with the compositions of 55.0P(2)O(5)–21.3SiO(2)–xCaO–(23.7 − x)Na(2)O (mol%, x = 0, 12.4, and 23.7) showed that Q(P)(3) and ([6])Si increased with increasing Na(2)O. When each glass powder was immersed in a tris-HCl buffer solution at 37 °C, the dissolution of NWF ions and network modifier (NWM) ions increased almost monotonically with time for all samples, indicating that the solubility of the samples was suppressed by the coexistence of CaO and Na(2)O, attributed to the delocalization of the electron distribution of P in the ([6])Si-coordinated Q(P)(3) units compared to that in the P- or ([4])Si-coordinated Q(P)(3) units, which reduces hydrolysis. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-12-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9727683/ /pubmed/36540251 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra06707b Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Takada, Kazuya
Tamura, Tomoyuki
Kasuga, Toshihiro
Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
title Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
title_full Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
title_fullStr Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
title_full_unstemmed Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
title_short Structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
title_sort structure and dissolution of silicophosphate glass
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9727683/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36540251
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra06707b
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