Preparation and properties of porous microspheres made from borate glass |
| |
Authors: | Conzone Samuel D Day Delbert E |
| |
Affiliation: | Materials Science and Engineering Department, Graduate Center for Materials Research, Missouri University of Science and Technology, Rolla, Missouri 65409-1170, USA. |
| |
Abstract: | Dysprosium lithium-borate glass microspheres and particles, ranging from 45 to 150 microm in diameter, were reacted with a 0.25 M phosphate solution at 37 degrees C, whose pH was either 3 or 8.8. The glass reacted nonuniformly and was converted into a porous, amorphous, hydrated, dysprosium phosphate reaction product. The amorphous product had the same volume and shape (pseudomorphic) as the unreacted glass, and could be dried without cracking. After heating at 300 degrees C for 1 h, the amorphous reaction product had a specific surface area of approximately 200 m(2)/g, a pore size of approximately 30 nm, and nominal crushing strength of approximately 10 MPa. When the reaction product was heated to 600 degrees C for 15 min, the specific surface area decreased to approximately 90 m(2)/g and the nominal crushing strength increased to 35 MPa. Heating above 615 degrees C converted the amorphous dysprosium phosphate product into crystalline DyPO(4), which contained open porosity until heated above 800 degrees C for 15 min. Highly porous materials of different chemical composition can be prepared by chemically reacting a borate-based glass with an aqueous solution at low-temperature (<100 degrees C). These highly porous materials are easy to process, and are considered candidates for controlled drug delivery, catalysis, chromatographic separation, filtration, and as bioactive materials. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|