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Antibacterial Copper-Hydroxyapatite Composite Coatings via Electrochemical Synthesis.

Rashmi GhoshOliver SwartSabrina WestgateBenjamin L MillerMatthew Z Yates
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2019)
Antibacterial copper-hydroxyapatite (Cu-HA) composite coatings on titanium were synthesized using a novel process consisting of two consecutive electrochemical reactions. In the first stage, HA nanocrystals were grown on titanium using the cathodic electrolytic synthesis. The HA-coated titanium was then used as the cathode in a second reaction stage to electrochemically reduce Cu2+ ions in solution to metallic Cu nanoparticles. Reaction conditions were found that result in nanoscale Cu particles growing on the surface of the HA crystals. The two-stage synthesis allows facile control of copper content in the HA coatings. Antibacterial activity was measured by culturing Escherichia coli (Gram-negative) and Staphylococcus aureus (Gram-positive) in the presence of coatings having varying copper contents. The coatings displayed copper concentration-dependent antibacterial activity against both types of bacteria, likely due to the slow release of copper ions from the coatings. The observation of antibacterial activity from a relatively low loading of copper on the bioactive HA support suggests that multifunctional implant coatings can be developed to supplement or supplant prophylactic antibiotics used in implant surgery that are responsible for creating resistant bacteria strains.
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