In this study the “green chemistry” use of the biosurfactant surfactin for the synthesis of calcium phosphate using the reverse microemulsion technique was demonstrated. Calcium phosphates are bioactive materials that are a major constituent of human teeth and bone tissue. A reverse microemulsion technique with surfactin was used to produce nanocrystalline brushite particles. Structural diversity (analyzed by SEM and TEM) resulted from different water to surfactin ratios (W/S; 250, 500, 1000 and 40,000). The particle sizes were found to be in the 16–200 nm range. Morphological variety was observed in the as-synthesized microemulsions, which consisted of nanospheres (~16 nm in diameter) and needle-like (8–14 nm in diameter and 80–100 nm in length) noncalcinated particles. However, the calcinated products included nanospheres (50–200 nm in diameter), oval (~300 nm in diameter) and nanorod (200–400 nm in length) particles. FTIR and XRD analysis confirmed the formation of brushite nanoparticles in the as-synthesized products, while calcium pyrophosphate was produced after calcination. These results indicate that the reverse microemulsion technique using surfactin is a green process suitable for the synthesis of nanoparticles.
Synthesis of Brushite Particles in Reverse Microemulsions of the Biosurfactant Surfactin
J. Maity,Tz-Jiun Lin,Henry Pai-Heng Cheng,Chien-Yen Chen,A. Satyanarayana Reddy,S. B. Atla,Young-Fo Chang,Hau-Ren Chen,C. Chen
Published 2011 in International Journal of Molecular Sciences
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2011
- Venue
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
- Publication date
2011-06-09
- Fields of study
Medicine, Materials Science, Chemistry
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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