Tunable Pseudo-Piezoelectric Effect in Doped Calcium Titanate for Bone Tissue Engineering

Abstract

CaTiO3 is a promising candidate as a pseudo-piezoelectric scaffold material for bone implantation. In this study, pure and magnesium/iron doped CaTiO3 are synthesized by sol-gel method and spark plasma sintering. Energy dispersive X-ray mapping confirm the homogenous distribution of doping elements in sintered samples. High-energy X-ray diffraction investigations reveal that doping of nanostructured CaTiO3 increased the strain and defects in the structure of CaTiO3 compared to the pure one. This led to a stronger pseudo-piezoelectric effect in the doped samples. The charge produced in magnesium doped CaTiO3 due to the direct piezoelectric effect is (2.9 ± 0.1) pC which was larger than the one produced in pure CaTiO3 (2.1 ± 0.3) pC, whereas the maximum charge was generated by iron doped CaTiO3 with (3.6 ± 0.2) pC. Therefore, the pseudo-piezoelectric behavior can be tuned by doping. This tuning of pseudo-piezoelectric response provides the possibility to systematically study the bone response using different piezoelectric strengths and possibly adjust for bone tissue engineering.

Description
Keywords
Bone tissue engineering, CaTiO3, Doping, Nanostructure, Piezoelectric effect, X‐ray diffraction
Citation
Riaz, A., Witte, K., Bodnar, W., Seitz, H., Schell, N., Springer, A., & Burkel, E. (2021). Tunable Pseudo-Piezoelectric Effect in Doped Calcium Titanate for Bone Tissue Engineering. 14(6). https://doi.org//10.3390/ma14061495
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported