| Literature DB >> 27678495 |
Yang Si1, Andrea Cossu2, Nitin Nitin2, Yue Ma1, Cunyi Zhao1, Bor-Sen Chiou3, Trung Cao3, Dong Wang4, Gang Sun1.
Abstract
Antimicrobial polymeric films that are both mechanically robust and function renewable would have broad technological implications for areas ranging from medical safety and bioengineering to foods industry; however, creating such materials has proven extremely challenging. Here, a novel strategy is reported to create high-strength N-halamine incorporated poly(vinyl alcohol-co-ethylene) films (HAF films) with renewable antimicrobial activity by combining melt radical graft polymerization and reactive extrusion technique. The approach allows here the intrinsically rechargeable N-halamine moieties to be covalently incorporated into polymeric films with high biocidal activity and durability. The resulting HAF films exhibit integrated properties of robust mechanical strength, high transparency, rechargeable chlorination capability (>300 ppm), and long-term durability, which can effectively offer 3-5 logs CFU reduction against typical pathogenic bacterium Escherichia coli within a short contact time of 1 h, even at high organism conditions. The successful synthesis of HAF films also provides a versatile platform for exploring the applications of antimicrobial N-halamine moieties in a self-supporting, structurally adaptive, and function renewable form.Entities:
Keywords: N-halamine; antimicrobial; medical safety; polymeric films; renewable
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27678495 DOI: 10.1002/mabi.201600304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Macromol Biosci ISSN: 1616-5187 Impact factor: 4.979