4.7 Article

Mechanochemistry as an Alternative Method of Green Synthesis of Silver Nanoparticles with Antibacterial Activity: A Comparative Study

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11051139

Keywords

mechanochemistry; Ag nanoparticles; green synthesis; solid-state synthesis; antibacterial activity

Funding

  1. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV-18-0357]
  2. Slovak Grant Agency VEGA [2/0044/18]
  3. Operational Program Research and Development through European Regional Development Fund [ITMS 26220220186]
  4. COST Association (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) [CA18112]
  5. Slovenian Research Agency [P2-0091]

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This study compares mechanochemical synthesis and traditional green synthesis methods for silver nanoparticles, finding that mechanochemical synthesis is more effective in removing unreacted silver nitrate. Silver nanoparticles synthesized through green synthesis exhibit higher antibacterial activity, potentially due to the presence of unreacted silver nitrate.
This study shows mechanochemical synthesis as an alternative method to the traditional green synthesis of silver nanoparticles in a comparative manner by comparing the products obtained using both methodologies and different characterization methods. As a silver precursor, the most commonly used silver nitrate was applied and the easily accessible lavender (Lavandula angustofolia L.) plant was used as a reducing agent. Both syntheses were performed using 7 different lavender:AgNO3 mass ratios. The synthesis time was limited to 8 and 15 min in the case of green and mechanochemical synthesis, respectively, although a significant amount of unreacted silver nitrate was detected in both crude reaction mixtures at low lavender:AgNO3 ratios. This finding is of particular interest mainly for green synthesis, as the potential presence of silver nitrate in the produced nanosuspension is often overlooked. Unreacted AgNO3 has been removed from the mechanochemically synthesized samples by washing. The nanocrystalline character of the products has been confirmed by both X-ray diffraction (Rietveld refinement) and transmission electron microscopy. The latter has shown bimodal size distribution with larger particles in tens of nanometers and the smaller ones below 10 nm in size. In the case of green synthesis, the used lavender:AgNO3 ratio was found to have a decisive role on the crystallite size. Silver chloride has been detected as a side-product, mainly at high lavender:AgNO3 ratios. Both products have shown a strong antibacterial activity, being higher in the case of green synthesis, but this can be ascribed to the presence of unreacted AgNO3. Thus, one-step mechanochemical synthesis (without the need to prepare extract and performing the synthesis as separate steps) can be applied as a sustainable alternative to the traditional green synthesis of Ag nanoparticles using plants.

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