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1.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 14(2)2024 Jan 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38251117

RESUMEN

A large amount of research in orthopedic and maxillofacial domains is dedicated to the development of bioactive 3D scaffolds. This includes the search for highly resorbable compounds, capable of triggering cell activity and favoring bone regeneration. Considering the phosphocalcic nature of bone mineral, these aims can be achieved by the choice of amorphous calcium phosphates (ACPs). Because of their metastable property, these compounds are however to-date seldom used in bulk form. In this work, we used a non-conventional "cold sintering" approach based on ultrafast low-pressure RT compaction to successfully consolidate ACP pellets while preserving their amorphous nature (XRD). Complementary spectroscopic analyses (FTIR, Raman, solid-state NMR) and thermal analyses showed that the starting powder underwent slight physicochemical modifications, with a partial loss of water and local change in the HPO42- ion environment. The creation of an open porous structure, which is especially adapted for non-load bearing bone defects, was also observed. Moreover, the pellets obtained exhibited sufficient mechanical resistance allowing for manipulation, surgical placement and eventual cutting/reshaping in the operation room. Three-dimensional porous scaffolds of cold-sintered reactive ACP, fabricated through this low-energy, ultrafast consolidation process, show promise toward the development of highly bioactive and tailorable biomaterials for bone regeneration, also permitting combinations with various thermosensitive drugs.

2.
RSC Adv ; 12(41): 26825-26833, 2022 Sep 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36320833

RESUMEN

The mesoporous metal-organic framework Cr-MIL-101-NH2 (MOF1) has been used to encapsulate, by a simple impregnation method, large amounts of copper sulfate. The resulting loaded material, Cu@MOF1, was successfully employed to slowly release copper(ii) into an appropriate reaction medium in which the reducing agent sodium ascorbate reduces copper(ii) to copper(i), thus allowing the well-known copper(i)-catalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition (CuAAC) "click" reaction to proceed in the absence of potentially high local copper(i) concentrations. The use of a MOF-based controlled copper release system such as Cu@MOF1 may be relevant for copper(i)-catalyzed reactions having substrates that could be degraded by potentially high local concentrations of copper(i). The copper chelating ligand TBTA (tris(benzyltriazolylmethyl)amine), a very useful ligand for click chemistry, has been successfully attached to the pores of MOF1. The resulting TBTA-functionalized MOF (MOF3) was compared with its non-functionalized version (MOF1). At copper loadings of ca. 3 mmol g-1, the results revealed that the performances of the two materials are strikingly similar. Upon immersion in methanol/water (95/5) containing sodium ascorbate, both materials slowly released copper encapsulated in their pores and could be recovered and reused efficiently for up to five reaction cycles without reloading with metal ion, while allowing the CuAAC reaction to proceed with excellent conversion rates and yields.

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