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Mechanically Reinforced Artificial Enamel by Mg 2+ -Induced Amorphous Intergranular Phases.

Yidi LiYang KongBingyu XueJialei DaiGang ShaHang PingLiwen LeiWeimin WangKun WangZhengyi Fu
Published in: ACS nano (2022)
Amorphous intergranular phases in mature natural tooth enamel are found to provide better adhesion and could dramatically affect their mechanical performance as a structure reinforcing phase. This study successfully synthesized an amorphous intergranular phase enhanced fluorapatite array controlled by Mg 2+ (FAP-M) at room temperature. Furthermore, atom probe tomography (APT) observation presents that Mg 2+ is enriched at grain boundaries during the assembly of enamel-like fluorapatite arrays, leading to the formation of intergranular phases of Mg-rich amorphous calcium phosphate (Mg-ACP). APT results also demonstrated that the segregation of Mg 2+ caused the chemical gradient in nanocrystalline attachment and realignment under the drive of inherent surface stress. These results indicate that the amorphous intergranular phases served like glue to connect each nanorod to reinforce the enamel-like arrays. Therefore, the as-received FAP-M artificial enamel exhibits excellent mechanical properties, with hardness and Young's modulus of 2.90 ± 0.13 GPa and 67.9 ± 3.4 GPa, which were ∼8.3 and 2.2 times higher than those of FAP arrays without controlled by Mg 2+ , respectively.
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