Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol.105, No.6, 3228-3234, 2007
Application of Fourier transform infrared Spectroscopy to study the interactions of poly(acrylic acid) and mixtures of poly(acrylic acid) and polyacrylamide with bone powders and Hydroxyapatites
Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy was used to study the interactions of aqueous solutions of poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) and mixtures of aqueous solutions of PAA and polyacrylamide (PAAm) with chemically and thermally treated bone powders (BPs) and two commercial hydroxyapatites (HAs). An analysis of the spectra of the precipitates that resulted from the mixtures of PAA and the chemically treated samples of BP revealed that the spectra exhibited three new bands at 1544, 1552, and 1661 cm(-1). The first band was attributed to the formation of calcium-polycarboxylate resulting from the interaction between the carboxylic acid groups of PAA and the calcium ions of BP. The appearance of the other two bands, in addition to the disappearance of the band corresponding to the absorption of the acid groups of PAA, provided strong evidence for the existence of other interactions between the carboxylic acid groups and the amide groups of the organic matrix of BP. On the other hand, the FTIR spectra of the samples that resulted from the mixture of PAA and thermally treated BP and the two commercial HAs showed only a new absorption band at 1544 cm(-1). The interactions of mixtures of the aqueous solutions of PAA and PAAm, adjusted at low or high pH values, with the different BPs and HAs were examined. The mixtures of the aqueous solutions of PAA and PAAm interacted with the different BPs and two HAs, resulting in the formation of ternary PAA-BP-PAAm and PAA-HA-PAAm complexes. (c) 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.