Silver-Doped Titanium Oxide Layers for Improved Photocatalytic Activity and Antibacterial Properties of Titanium Implants
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Published:2024-06-14
Issue:6
Volume:15
Page:163
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ISSN:2079-4983
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Container-title:Journal of Functional Biomaterials
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language:en
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Short-container-title:JFB
Author:
Ali Aya1ORCID, Polepalli Likhitha1ORCID, Chowdhury Sheetal1ORCID, Carr Mary A.2, Janorkar Amol V.1, Marquart Mary E.2ORCID, Griggs Jason A.1, Bumgardner Joel D.3, Roach Michael D.1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. University of Mississippi Medical Center, Department of Biomedical Materials Science, Jackson, MS 39216, USA 2. University of Mississippi Medical Center, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, School of Medicine, Jackson, MS 39216, USA 3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA
Abstract
Titanium has a long history of clinical use, but the naturally forming oxide is not ideal for bacterial resistance. Anodization processes can modify the crystallinity, surface topography, and surface chemistry of titanium oxides. Anatase, rutile, and mixed phase oxides are known to exhibit photocatalytic activity (PCA)-driven bacterial resistance under UVA irradiation. Silver additions are reported to enhance PCA and reduce bacterial attachment. This study investigated the effects of silver-doping additions to three established anodization processes. Silver doping showed no significant influence on oxide crystallinity, surface topography, or surface wettability. Oxides from a sulfuric acid anodization process exhibited significantly enhanced PCA after silver doping, but silver-doped oxides produced from phosphoric-acid-containing electrolytes did not. Staphylococcus aureus attachment was also assessed under dark and UVA-irradiated conditions on each oxide. Each oxide exhibited a photocatalytic antimicrobial effect as indicated by significantly decreased bacterial attachment under UVA irradiation compared to dark conditions. However, only the phosphorus-doped mixed anatase and rutile phase oxide exhibited an additional significant reduction in bacteria attachment under UVA irradiation as a result of silver doping. The antimicrobial success of this oxide was attributed to the combination of the mixed phase oxide and higher silver-doping uptake levels.
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