4.6 Article

Microencapsulation of lime (Citrus aurantifolia) oil for antibacterial finishing of cotton fabric

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 1743-1749

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0ra09314a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher Education [1827/UN6.3.1/LT/2020]
  2. Universitas Padjadjaran [1397/UN6.3.1/PM/2020]

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This study prepared a functional cotton fabric incorporated with lime essential oil microcapsules, using alginate and gelatin as shells and citric acid as the binder. The optimized fabric showed high antibacterial activities against typical skin bacteria and could potentially be applied in antibacterial functional textiles.
Functional cotton fabric incorporated with antibacterial microcapsules of lime (C. aurantifolia) essential oil (LO) was prepared. The coacervation method, employing two biopolymers of alginate and gelatin as the shells, was preferentially selected to produce the LO microcapsules, whereas immobilization of the LO microcapsules onto the fabric was done using the pad-dry-cure method using various concentrations of citric acid binder. The antibacterial inhibition zone of the functional fabric was subsequently analysed using the Kirby Bauer method. The LO microcapsules were produced with a yield, encapsulation efficiency (EE), and oil content (OC) of 47 +/- 4%, 84 +/- 11%, and 58 +/- 4%, respectively. The homogenous spherical and soft microcapsules (1.554 mu m) bonded effectively by 4% citric acid onto the surface of the fabric and detached back by only 3% after 15 cycles of washing. Overall, the optimized functional fabric exhibited the highest antibacterial activities among others against typical skin bacteria, such as S. aureus, E. coli, K. pneumoniae, and S. epidermidis, and thus it can be potentially applied to obtain antibacterial functional textile.

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