Polyaspartic Acid Concentration Controls the Rate
of Calcium Phosphate Nanorod Formation in High Concentration Systems
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Abstract
Polyelectrolytes
are known to greatly affect calcium phosphate
(CaP) mineralization. The reaction kinetics as well as the CaP phase,
morphology and aggregation state depend on the relative concentrations
of the polyelectrolyte and the inorganic ions in a complex, nonlinear
manner. This study examines the structural evolution and kinetics
of polyaspartic acid (pAsp) directed CaP mineralization at high concentrations
of polyelectrolytes, calcium, and total phosphate (19β30 mg/mL
pAsp, 50β100 mM Ca<sup>2+</sup>, Ca/P = 2). Using a novel combination
of characterization techniques including cryogenic transmission electron
microscopy (cryo-TEM), spectrophotometry, X-ray total scattering pair
distribution function analysis, and attenuated total reflectance Fourier
transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), it was determined that
the CaP mineralization occurred over four transition steps. The steps
include the formation of aggregates of pAsp stabilized CaP spherical
nanoparticles (sNP), crystallization of sNP, oriented attachment of
the sNP into nanorods, and further crystallization of the nanorods.
The intermediate aggregate sizes and the reaction kinetics were found
to be highly polymer concentration dependent while the sizes of the
particles were not concentration dependent. This study demonstrates
the complex role of pAsp in controlling the mechanism as well as the
kinetics of CaP mineralization