Publication | Closed Access
Graphene and hydroxyapatite self-assemble into homogeneous, free standing nanocomposite hydrogels for bone tissue engineering
139
Citations
35
References
2015
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBone Tissue EngineeringBiomaterials DesignBiofabricationBiomedical EngineeringHydrogelsSynthetic Bone SubstituteUniform Np DepositionRegenerative BiomaterialsBioceramicMaterials ScienceFunctional Tissue EngineeringNanocomposite HydrogelsBiopolymer GelNanomaterialsGrapheneHard Tissue EngineeringMedicineBiomaterialsHa NpsBiocompatible MaterialGraphene/np Powders
Graphene-nanoparticle (NP) composites have shown potential in applications ranging from batteries to, more recently, tissue engineering. Graphene and NPs should be integrated into uniform free-standing structures for best results. However, to date, this has been achieved only in few examples; in most cases, graphene/NP powders lacking three-dimensional (3D) structure were produced. Here we report a facile and universal method that can be used to synthesize such structures based on colloidal chemistry. We start from aqueous suspensions of both graphene oxide nanosheets and citrate-stabilized hydroxyapatite (HA) NPs. Hydrothermal treatment of the mixtures of both suspensions reduces graphene oxide to graphene, and entraps colloidal HA NPs into the 3D graphene network thanks to a self-assembled graphite-like shell formed around it. Dialysis through this shell causes uniform NP deposition onto the graphene walls. The resulting graphene-HA gels are highly porous, strong, electrically conductive and biocompatible, making them promising scaffolds for bone tissue engineering. This method can be applied to produce a variety of free-standing 3D graphene-based nanocomposites with unprecedented homogeneity.
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