Templated Mesoporous Silica Outer Shell for Controlled Silver Release of a Magnetically Recoverable and Reusable Nanocomposite for Water Disinfection
Author(s) -
Ping Y. Furlan,
Alexander Y. Furlan,
Kim Kisslinger,
Michael E. Melcer
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.1c14669
Subject(s) - nanocomposite , materials science , mesoporous material , chemical engineering , mesoporous silica , cationic polymerization , bromide , shell (structure) , fourier transform infrared spectroscopy , magnetite , nanoparticle , nuclear chemistry , nanotechnology , composite material , inorganic chemistry , polymer chemistry , chemistry , organic chemistry , metallurgy , catalysis , engineering
In this work, we encapsulated Fe 3 O 4 @SiO 2 @Ag (MS-Ag), a bifunctional magnetic silver core-shell structure, with an outer mesoporous silica (mS) shell to form an Fe 3 O 4 @SiO 2 @Ag@mSiO 2 (MS-Ag-mS) nanocomposite using a cationic CTAB (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) micelle templating strategy. The mS shell acts as protection to slow down the oxidation and detachment of the AgNPs and incorporates channels to control the release of antimicrobial Ag + ions. Results of TEM, STEM, HRSEM, EDS, BET, and FTIR showed the successful formation of the mS shells on MS-Ag aggregates 50-400 nm in size with highly uniform pores ∼4 nm in diameter that were separated by silica walls ∼2 nm thick. Additionally, the mS shell thickness was tuned to demonstrate controlled Ag + release; an increase in shell thickness resulted in an increased path length required for Ag + ions to travel out of the shell, reducing MS-Ag-mS' ability to inhibi E. coli growth as illustrated by the inhibition zone results. Through a shaking test, the MS-Ag-mS nanocomposite was shown to eradicate 99.99+% of a suspension of E. coli at 1 × 10 6 CFU/mL with a silver release of less than 0.1 ppb, well under the EPA recommendation of 0.1 ppm. This high biocidal efficiency with minimal silver leach is ascribed to the nanocomposite's mS shell surface characteristics, including having hydroxyl groups and possessing a high degree of structural periodicity at the nanoscale or "smoothness" that encourages association with bacteria and retains high Ag + concentration on its surface and in its close proximity. Furthermore, the nanocomposite demonstrated consistent antimicrobial performance and silver release levels over multiple repeated uses (after being recovered magnetically because of the oxidation-resistant silica-coated magnetic Fe 3 O 4 core). It also proved effective at killing all microbes from Long Island Sound surface water. The described MS-Ag-mS nanocomposite is highly synergistic, easy to prepare, and readily recoverable and reusable and offers structural tunability affecting the bioavailability of Ag + , making it excellent for water disinfection that will find wide applications.
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