4.8 Article

Aqueous Zinc Compounds as Residual Antimicrobial Agents for Textiles

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages 7709-7716

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.7b15871

Keywords

antibacterial coating; medical textiles; zinc salts; residual antimicrobials; end-user disinfectants

Funding

  1. Georgia Tech's President's Undergraduate Research Award (PURA)
  2. Petit Bioengineering Undergraduate Research Fellowship

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Textiles, especially those worn by patients and medical professionals, serve as vectors for proliferating pathogens. Upstream manufacturing techniques and end-user practices, such as transition-metal embedment in textile fibers or alcohol-based disinfectants, can mitigate pathogen growth, but both techniques have their shortcomings. Fiber embedment requires complete replacement of all fabrics in a facility, and the effects of embedded nanoparticles on human health remain unknown. Alcohol-based, end -user disinfectants are short-lived because they quickly volatilize. In this work, common zinc salts are explored as an end -user residual antimicrobial agent. Zinc salts show cost-effective and long-lasting antimicrobial efficacy when solution-deposited on common textiles, such as nylon, polyester, and cotton. Unlike common alcohol-based disinfectants, these zinc salt-treated textiles mitigate microbial growth for more than 30 days and withstand commercial drying. Polyester fabrics treated with ZnO and ZnCl2 were further explored because of their commercial ubiquity and likelihood for rapid commercialization. ZnCl2-treated textiles were found to retain their antimicrobial coating through abrasive testing, whereas ZnO-treated textiles did not. Scanning electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry analyses suggest that ZnCl2 likely hydrolyzes and reacts with portions of the polyester fiber, chemically attaching to the fiber, whereas colloidal ZnO simply sediments and binds with weaker physical interactions.

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