Publication: A Study on Tailoring Silver Release from Micro‐Arc Oxidation Coating Fabricated on Titanium
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Wiley
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Abstract
This study is initiated with the aim of regulating the release of silver (Ag) as an antibacterial agent from the micro‐arc oxidation (MAO) coating. Herein, an external 5 wt% Tin(II) chloride (SnCl2) containing biodegradable polycaprolactone (PCL) layer is formed on the 0.8 wt% Ag‐incorporated MAO coating by the dip coating method. 5 wt% SnCl2 addition into PCL provides a steady release of Ag into concentrated simulated body fluid (1.5X SBF) from the underlying MAO coating at 37 °C. When the Ag release rate is taken into consideration, it is quantified as 0.0089 and 0.0586 ppm day−1 for PCL‐covered MAO and PCL‐free MAO coatings, respectively. It is finally concluded that the preliminary result of this study can be promising for minimizing the in vivo adverse effects of Ag+ ions arising from rapid release as well as maintaining antibacterial efficacy for prolonged periods, which is ideal for preventing the risk of postimplantation infections.
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micro-arc oxidation, polycaprolactone, tin chloride, coating, silver release, titanium