4.7 Article

Electrospun cellulose acetate composites containing supported metal nanoparticles for antifungal membranes

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 563, Issue -, Pages 912-920

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.10.072

Keywords

Electrospinning; Nanometals; Fungistatic membranes; Cellulose acetate; Sepiolite; Mesoporous silica

Funding

  1. FP7-ERA-Net Susfood [2014/00153/001]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [CTM2013-45775]
  3. Direccion General de Universidades e Investigacion de la Comunidad de Madrid, Research Network [S2013/MAE-2716]
  4. University of Alcala

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Electrospun cellulose acetate composites containing silver and copper nanoparticles supported in sepiolite and mesoporous silica were prepared and tested as tungistatic membranes against the fungus Aspergillus niger. The nanoparticles were in the 3-50 nm range for sepiolite supported materials and limited by the size of mesopores (5-8 nm) in the case of mesoporous silica. Sepiolite and silica were well dispersed within the fibers, with larger aggregates in the micrometer range, and allowed a controlled release of metals to create a tungistatic environment. The effect was assessed using digital image analysis to evaluate fungal growth rate and fluorescence readings using a viability stain. The results showed that silver and copper nanomaterials significantly impaired the growth of fungi when the spores were incubated either in direct contact with particles or included in cellulose acetate composite membranes The fungistatic effect took place on germinating spores before hyphae growth conidiophore formation. After 24 h the cultures were separated from fungistatic materials and showed growth impairment only due to the prior exposure. Growth reduction was important for all the particles and membranes with respect to non-exposed controls. The effect of copper and silver loaded materials was not significantly different from each other with average reductions around 70% for bare particles and 50% for membranes. Copper on sepiolite was particularly efficient with a decrease of metabolic activity of up to 80% with respect to controls. Copper materials induced rapid maturation and conidiation with fungi splitting in sets of subcolonies. Metal-loaded nanomaterials acted as reservoirs for the controlled release of metals. The amount of silver or copper released daily by composite membranes represented roughly 1% of their total load of metals.Supported nanomaterials encapsulated in nanofibers allow formulating active membranes with high antifungal performance at the same time minimizing the risk of nanoparticle release into the environment. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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