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. 2005 Jan 20;109(2):999-1005.
doi: 10.1021/jp046451d.

A new model for nanoscale enamel dissolution

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A new model for nanoscale enamel dissolution

Lijun Wang et al. J Phys Chem B. .

Abstract

The dissolution kinetics of human tooth enamel surfaces was investigated using nanomolar-sensitive constant composition (CC) and in situ atomic force microscopy (AFM) under simulated caries formation conditions (relative undersaturation with respect to hydroxyapatite = 0.902, pH = 4.5). Scanning electron microscopic (SEM) examination of the resulting etched enamel surfaces showed that deminerzalization, initiated at core/wall interfaces of rods, developed anisotropically along the c-axes. After an initial rapid removal of surface polishing artifacts, the dissolution rate decreased as the reaction proceeded in accordance with our recently proposed crystal dissolution model, resulting in hollow enamel cores and nanosized remaining crystallites, resistant to further dissolution. Generally, dissolution of minerals is regarded as a spontaneous reaction in which all the solid phase can be dissolved in undersaturated solutions. However, the dissolution of some biominerals may be suppressed when the crystallites approach nanometer size. This study shows that CC demineralization of enamel in acidic medium follows this new model that can be used to mimic carious lesion formation. In dissolution studies, nanosized enamel crystallites exhibit a remarkable degree of self-preservation in the fluctuating physiological milieu.

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