4.7 Article

Effect of polymer coating composition on the aggregation rates of Ag nanoparticles in NaCl solutions and seawaters

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 631-632, Issue -, Pages 1153-1162

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.03.131

Keywords

Silver nanoparticles; Aggregation; Seawater; Organic coatings; NaCl media

Funding

  1. Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme [PIEF-GA-2012-329575]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [CTM2016-78798]
  3. European Union Seventh Framework Programme [310584]

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The aggregation behaviour of polymer-coated silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) was characterized in NaCl solutions, and in two seawaters of different salinities and dissolved organic matter (DOM) contents. Representative organic coatings i.e. tannic acid (TA), alginic acid (ALG), two gum Arabic samples (GAL and GAH), branched polyethylenimine (BPEI), and non-ionic surfactants (reference material NM-300K) were selected to cover a wide range of zeta-potentials. The stability in NaCl solutions, as determined from the rate of variation in hydrodynamic size within a timeframe of one hour, followed the order BPEI >> NM-300K approximate to GAL >> ALG approximate to TA >> GAH. In the seawater samples the order was NM-300K approximate to GAL >> ALG > GAH > TA approximate to BPEI, and only TA, GAL and NM-300K batches behaved as expected from the NaCl experiments. Remarkably, the BPEI sample showed the largest aggregation rate in the seawater sample with the highest DOM concentration (277 mu M C). The GAH sample displayed a non-monotonic variation in aggregation rate with NaCl concentration, apparently due to concomitant precipitation of AgCl. The results indicate that non-electrostatic stabilization mechanisms and DOM-coating interactions are important for the prediction of stability and persistence of polymer-coated AgNPs in seawater. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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