Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank |
Piccirillo, C., Dunnill, C. W., Pullar, R. C., Tobaldi, D. M., Labrincha, J. A., & Parkin, I. P., et al. (2013). Calcium phosphate-based materials of natural origin showing photocatalytic activity. J. Mater. Chem. A, 1(21), 6452–6461. Added by: Sarina (2023-05-06 07:59:19) |
Resource type: Journal Article DOI: 10.1039/C3TA10673J BibTeX citation key: Piccirillo2013 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: Englisch = English Creators: Castro, Dunnill, Labrincha, Parkin, Piccirillo, Pintado, Pullar, Tobaldi Collection: J. Mater. Chem. A |
Views: 1/135 Views index: % Popularity index: 1.25% |
Meine Sichtweise (Keine vollständige Zusammenfassung des Artikels! Meine Meinung muss nicht mit der Meinung der Autoren übereinstimmen! Bitte lesen Sie auch die Originalarbeit!)
Enthält das Reflektionsspektrum von gemahlenem Knochen von 300 nm bis 800 nm Added by: Sarina |
Abstract |
Calcium phosphate based materials of natural origin with photocatalytic properties were produced. Bones of Atlantic cod fish were treated in appropriate solutions (either Ca- or Ti-containing salts) and successively annealed. Results showed multiphasic materials (hydroxyapatite{,} β-tricalcium phosphate and anatase titania) with excellent photocatalytic performance under both UV and visible light{,} with an anatase concentration of only about 2 mol%. Results with such a low amount of anatase have never been reported before for a calcium phosphate-based material; this is attributed to the presence of anatase being mainly on the surface. Single-phase hydroxyapatite (Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2 or HAp) also showed some photocatalytic properties and antibacterial activity.
Added by: Sarina |