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Nanoparticles and Efficient Sterilization of Bacterial Samples

Nanoparticles and Efficient Sterilization of Bacterial Samples.

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Nanoparticles and Efficient Sterilization of Bacterial Samples

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  1. Nanoparticles and Efficient Sterilization of Bacterial Samples Amanda Svendsen, Beverly Harris, Nin Dingra, Joyce Chow, Brandon Lawson, Will E. Lynch, and Delana A. Nivens, Department of Chemistry, Armstrong Atlantic State University, 11935 Abercorn Street, Savannah, GA 31419, amanda_svendsen06@yahoo.com

  2. Introduction • Nanoparticles • can be used to remove contaminants by photocatalysis • are semiconductors

  3. Semiconductors

  4. Photocatalytic oxidation Figure 1. Example of photocatalytic oxidation on a semiconductor particle

  5. Semiconductor + hv  e-CB + h+VB • O2 + e-  O2- (reaction 1) • h+ +H2O  OH▪ + h+ (reaction 2) • O2- + h+ HO2▪ (reaction 3) • HO2▪ + h+ + e- H2O2 (reaction 4) • H2O2 + hv  2OH▪ (reaction 5) Figure 2. Reactions that occur on the surface of nanoparticles that allow for oxidation/reduction reactions to occur

  6. Possible mechanism-lipid oxidation Initiation - RH + O2 R▪ + ▪OH Propagation- R▪ + O2  ROO▪ -ROO▪ + RH  R▪ + ROOH -ROOH  RO▪ + HO▪ Termination- R▪ + R▪  RR -R▪ + ROO▪  ROOR - ROO▪ + ROO▪  ROOR + O2

  7. Procedure • Nanoparticles of cerium oxide, magnesium oxide, nickel(II) oxide, tungsten(VI) oxide, titanium(IV) oxide, and indium tin oxide were purchased and used as received. • CdS with cystine and molybdenum(IV) disulfide nanoparticles were prepared in the lab

  8. Preparation of CdS with cystine • Soln A: 50 mL of CdSO4 (1.0M) or Cd(NO3)2 (1.0 M) in 0.1 M HCl • Soln B: 100 mL of 0.25 M cystine in a 1 M tris buffer (pH=8.6) • A solution was made with a 2:1 ratio of Soln B: Soln A • Na2S (1.0 M) was added by titration (2.5 Na2S :1 Cd ratio) • Centrifuge at 3500 rpm - three times – each time the water was decanted and rinsed with DI-water

  9. Preparation of Molybdenum (IV) disulfide • Into a round bottom flask, 4% dioctylsulfosuccinate (1.72 g) was dissolved in xylene (50 mL) using heat while bubbling Argon • Once the solution reached 100 ºC , Mo(CO)6 (113 g) and sulfur (0.0141 g) were added • Refluxed for an hour • Dried in oven • Suspended in DI water

  10. Procedure cont. • Samples were prepared with a 1:1 ratio in duplicate (mL of nanoparticle soln: mL of E. coli) • One sample was exposed to all wavelengths of light greater than 400 nm and the second was not exposed to any light • Various exposure time trials (30 min, 1 hour, 2 hour, and 24 hours) • Solutions were then diluted, plated and incubated for 24 hours • The number of bacteria that remained in the sample could then be determined

  11. Results and Discussion • Wavelength selection– why 400 nm and above?

  12. % of E. Coli Killed, No light Exposure

  13. % of E. Coli Killed, Sulfide Nanoparticles and Light

  14. % E. Coli Killed,Exposed to Light and Oxide Nanoparticles

  15. Results

  16. % E. Coli Killed Overall Picture

  17. Conclusion • There was an observed increase in the percentage of bacteria killed in the presence of the nanoparticles when compared to only distilled water • There was an observed increase in the percentage of bacteria killed in the presence of nanoparticles exposed to visible light when compared to not being exposed • Further study

  18. References 1Pal, B., Sharon, M., and Kamat, D. Photocatalytic Bactericidal Action of Commerical Grade Fe2O3 Powders on Pathogenic Bacteria.Chem. And Environ Res. 1996, 5, 51-56. 2Seven, O., Dindar, B., Aydemir, S., Metin, D., Ozinel, M.A. and Icli, S. Solar photocataltic disinfection of a group of bacteria and fungi aqueous suspensions with TiO2, ZnO and Sahara desert dust. Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology.2004, 103-107. 3Ireland, J.C., Klostermann, Petra, Rice, E.W., and Clark, R.M. Inactivation of Escherichia coli by Titanium Dioxide Photocatalytic Oxidation. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.1993, 59, 5, 3668- 1670. 4Srinivasan, C., and Somasundaram, N. Bactericidal and detoxification effects of irradiated semiconductor catalyst, TiO2. Current Science. 2003, 85, 10, 1431- 1438. 5Tao, H, Wei, W., and Zhang, S. Photocatalytic inhibitory effect of immobilized TiO2 semicondcutor on the growth of Escherichia coli studied by acoustic wave impedance analysis. Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology. 2004. 161, 193-199. 6Saito, T., Iwase, T., Horie, J., and Morioka, T. Mode of photocatalytic bactericidal action of powdered semiconductor TiO2 on mutans streptococci. J Photochem. Photobiol. 1992, 14, 369-379. 7Lynch, W. E., Nivens, D.A., Helmly, B.C., Richardson, M., and Williams, R.R. Luminescent Properties of Doped Nanoparticles. Preparation of ZnS with Manganese, Copper, and Silver Dopants. Chem. Educator. 2004, 9, 1-4.

  19. References 8Manness, Pin-Ching, Smolinski, Sharon, Blake, Daniel M., Huang, Z., Wolfrum, E.J., and Jacoby, W.A. Bactericidal Activity of Photocatalytic TiO2 Reaction: toward an Understanding of Its Killing Mechanism. Appl. Environ. Microbiol.1999, 65, 9, 4094-4098. 9Photocatalysis and Photodeposition in Nanoparticle and Ultra-Thin Film Synthesis. http://www.clarkson.edu/camp/annual04/page4.htm Online. 10Kamat, Prashant V. Photoinduced Transformations in Semiconductor-metal Nanocomposite Assemblies. Pure Appl. Chem.2002. 74, 9, 1693-1706. 11Dyer, R.G., Stewart, M.W., Mitcheson, J., George, K., Alberti, M.M., and Laker, M.F. 7-Ketocholesterol, a specific indicator of lipoprotein oxidation, and malondialdehyde in non- insulin dependent diabetes and peripheral vascular disease. Clinica Chimica Acta. 1997. 260, 1- 13.

  20. Questions???

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