4.7 Article

Titanium industrial residues surface modification towards its reuse as antimicrobial surfaces

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 28, Pages 38224-38237

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-13359-x

Keywords

Titanium flakes; TiO2 nanotube; Antimicrobial surface; Torularhodin and β -carotene

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund through Competitiveness Operational Program [P_36_611, 107066]

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In this study, a new material obtained from titanium ingots residue was coated with natural carotenoids having antibacterial properties. The waste material was transformed into nanostructured titanium dioxide surface with photocatalytic and antibacterial properties. The impurities in the titanium scrap were found to improve the properties of the residue surfaces, and the addition of carotenoids enhanced the antibacterial effects of the titanium surface.
In this study, a new material obtained from titanium ingots residue was coated with natural carotenoids having antibacterial properties. The waste is a no recycling titanium scrap from technological production process which was pressed and transformed into disks titanium samples. Through anodization and annealing procedures of the titanium disk, a nanostructured titanium dioxide surface with photocatalytic and antibacterial properties was successfully obtained. The titanium scrap impurities (V, Al, and N), unwanted for production process, have shown to improve electrochemical and semiconductor properties of the residue surfaces. The nanostructured titanium scrap surface was modified with two different carotenoids, torularhodin and beta-carotene, to potentiate the antibacterial properties. The bactericidal tests were performed against Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli, both Gram-negative. The best bactericidal effect is obtained for nanostructured titanium scrap disks immersed in torularhodin, with a percentage of growth inhibition around 60% against both tested bacteria. The results suggest that this low-cost waste material is suitable for efficient reuse as antibacterial surface after a few simple and inexpensive treatments.

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