The design of a process to create yttrium aluminosilicate microspheres with a core-shell structure is of interest in the field of cancer brachytherapy. Glass microspheres with yttrium-depleted shell may indeed reduce the risk of 90Y release into the organism. Here we show - by means of confocal micro-Raman scattering, microfluorescence, X-ray-fluorescence analysis, and IR spectroscopy - that yttrium depletion may be achieved by etching in HCl solution (pH 2) at a rate of 1 μm day -1 in bulk glass and 3 μm day -1 in glass microsphere (35 μm of diameter). Importantly, the spectroscopic results - collected in confocal configuration along the processed layer - indicate a high degree of structural reconstruction of the glass network, with the formation of an interconnected silicate-rich glass that surrounds a core of unmodified yttrium aluminosilicate. We also demonstrate that the process is driven by non-bridging oxygen sites, which regulate the hydroxylation and structural reconstruction of the glass within the Y-depleted layer. The analysis gives also some insight into open fundamental questions about the short-range structure and the chemical stability of this kind of glass, which is also important in photonics and nuclear waste disposal.

Sigaev, V., Atroschenko, G., Savinkov, V., Sarkisov, P., Babajew, G., Lingel, K., et al. (2012). Structural rearrangement at the yttrium-depleted surface of HCl-processed yttrium aluminosilicate glass for 90Y-microsphere brachytherapy. MATERIALS CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 133(1), 24-28 [10.1016/j.matchemphys.2011.12.079].

Structural rearrangement at the yttrium-depleted surface of HCl-processed yttrium aluminosilicate glass for 90Y-microsphere brachytherapy

LORENZI, ROBERTO;PALEARI, ALBERTO MARIA FELICE
2012

Abstract

The design of a process to create yttrium aluminosilicate microspheres with a core-shell structure is of interest in the field of cancer brachytherapy. Glass microspheres with yttrium-depleted shell may indeed reduce the risk of 90Y release into the organism. Here we show - by means of confocal micro-Raman scattering, microfluorescence, X-ray-fluorescence analysis, and IR spectroscopy - that yttrium depletion may be achieved by etching in HCl solution (pH 2) at a rate of 1 μm day -1 in bulk glass and 3 μm day -1 in glass microsphere (35 μm of diameter). Importantly, the spectroscopic results - collected in confocal configuration along the processed layer - indicate a high degree of structural reconstruction of the glass network, with the formation of an interconnected silicate-rich glass that surrounds a core of unmodified yttrium aluminosilicate. We also demonstrate that the process is driven by non-bridging oxygen sites, which regulate the hydroxylation and structural reconstruction of the glass within the Y-depleted layer. The analysis gives also some insight into open fundamental questions about the short-range structure and the chemical stability of this kind of glass, which is also important in photonics and nuclear waste disposal.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Etching; Glasses; Photoluminescence spectroscopy; Raman spectroscopy and scattering
English
2012
133
1
24
28
none
Sigaev, V., Atroschenko, G., Savinkov, V., Sarkisov, P., Babajew, G., Lingel, K., et al. (2012). Structural rearrangement at the yttrium-depleted surface of HCl-processed yttrium aluminosilicate glass for 90Y-microsphere brachytherapy. MATERIALS CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 133(1), 24-28 [10.1016/j.matchemphys.2011.12.079].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/29034
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