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Bach is Back   
Conserving Coral   
Robot Detector   
Catching the Virus   
Engineering and Push-Ups   
Networked Telescopes   
Breathing Pictures   
Recording Memory    
Small size, big sound    
Virtual Cocoon   
Avoiding Mass Extinctions Engine   
Smart house helps dementia sufferers   
The Biggest Telescope in Space   
‘We Recommend This …’   
‘Audioblogging’   
The Jumping Robot   
New help for Depression   
Hydrogen Located on Moon   
Dinosaur teeth tell evolutionary story   
2.7 Billion Year Old Discovery   
Gorilla Talk Reveals New Insight   
Eco Housing Experiment   
Music and Endurance   
Mini Robots   
Cloud Radar   
Smart Green Meter   
New conservation   
Electronic Paper   
I believe in yesterday   
Bioglass Bone Healing    
The Naked Planet   
Desert Plants   
Criminal Evidence   
Snake Power   
Interactive Live TV   
Genetics Milestone   
The Bionic Hand   
Dry Washing Machine   
Self-repairing Aircraft   
Red Hot Chilli Sensors   
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Driverless bus   
Virtual London   

University of Warwick
For more information on physics at Warwick University   

Imperial College London
For info on the Department of Materials at Imperial College London   

Bioglass Bone Healing

First breakthrough
In the late 1960s a team of scientists at Imperial College London developed the first ‘bioglass’, a man-made material that could be used to repair bones, joints and teeth. Nearly 40 years later another team at Imperial College discovered a new kind of Bioglass that worked even better. Collaborating with Professor Mark Smith, a physicist at Warwick University’s new Nuclear-Magnetic Resonance unit, they began to discover why.

Collaboration
Professsor Smith explains, ‘The project is a collaboration between four different groups and we each provide a different expertise. There’s the group at Warwick, the dental group at University College London, the group at the University of Kent, and the group at Imperial College who bring the materials expertise.’ Smith has long been interested in glass structure and dissolving materials, ‘I come at this from a physics background and an interest in fundamental physics of glasses and their dissolution. It has a really practical application.’    

Dissolving glass
This project required a range of different specialisms as the bioglass needs very specific properties. The team came up with a way to give the glass ‘porosity’ so that when the bioglass is implanted it can interact with body fluid. ‘The reaction between the body fluid and the glass has two effects,’ says Smith. ‘It stimulates growth and bone, and at the same time it starts to dissolve away, so eventually the glass is completely removed from the body by natural processes. You will have actually grown new and healthy bone where the glass was. The trick is to create a glass that elicits the biological response that grows bone, and at the same time dissolves away. This is why it has required a team to understand the different aspects of this problem.’ Through using Warwick’s new Nuclear-Magnetic Machine the team could see calcium rushing out of the bioglass into the new bones.

Imperial College discovered how to make the system porous, and the second part of the project ‘was a group effort,’ says Smith, ‘realising that it was actually calcium ions moving around the systems was a great determining step. You could only prove that, beyond doubt, by bringing together information that three of the groups could separately get.’

LearnEnglish Science activities
Why not do a language activity based on this cubed story, Bioglass Bone Healing? You can double-click on any word on this page for a dictionary definition.   

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