4.6 Article

Synthesis, characterization and antibacterial activity of Ag incorporated ZnO-graphene nanocomposites

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 6, Issue 91, Pages 88751-88761

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6ra14808e

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Funding

  1. UGC-RGNF
  2. CSIR, Govt. of India
  3. 12th Five Year Plan project of CSIR [ESC0202]

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The present work reports on the successful one-pot surfactant-free in situ synthesis of silver incorporated ZnO-chemically converted graphene (CCG) nanocomposites (AZG) by adopting a low temperature solution technique from zinc acetate dihydrate, silver nitrate and graphene oxide, and the varying silver content (up to 20% Ag with respect to Zn) in the precursors. X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy studies confirmed the presence of Ag and ZnO nanoparticles (NPs), distributed uniformly with CCG. FTIR, Raman, UV-visible and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic analyses confirmed the existence of interaction between CCG with the inorganic moieties (ZnO/Zn2+ and Ag NPs) of the AZG samples. In vitro cytotoxicity and quantitative cell viability of the human ovarian teratocarcinoma cell line (PA1) was studied up to a maximum sample concentration of 200 mg ml(-1). Antibacterial activity was also measured on E. coli and S. aureus to confirm the efficiency of the nanocomposite, especially for killing bacterial cells without any major effect on the surrounding cells. Among the nanocomposites, the 10% Ag incorporated sample at a 6.25 mg ml(-1) dose showed excellent antibacterial activity with negligible cytotoxicity. This simple strategy could be applied in the synthesis of Ag incorporated different metal oxide-CCG nanohybrids for antibacterial applications.

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