The local structures of highly ordered mesoporous bioactive CaO−SiO2−P2O5 glasses were investigated for
variable Ca contents. 1H NMR revealed a diversity of hydrogen-bonded and “isolated” surface silanols as
well as adsorbed water molecules. The structural roles of Si and P were explored using a combination of 29Si
and 31P magic-angle spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques; the proximities of Si
and P to protons were studied through cross-polarization-based experiments, including 1H−29Si and 1H−31P
hetero-nuclear two-dimensional correlation spectroscopy. The results are consistent with SiO2 being the main
pore-wall component, whereas P is present as a separate amorphous calcium orthophosphate phase, which is
dispersed over the pore wall as nanometer-sized clusters. The excess Ca that is not consumed in the phosphate
phase modifies the silica glass network where it associates at/near the mesoporous surface. This biphasic
structural model of the pore wall leads to the high accessibility of both Ca and P to body fluids, and its
relation to the experimentally demonstrated high in vitro bioactivities of these materials is discussed.
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