| Literature DB >> 29600144 |
Maya Endo1, Zhishun Wei1,2, Kunlei Wang1,3, Baris Karabiyik1, Kenta Yoshiiri1,3, Paulina Rokicka1,4, Bunsho Ohtani1,3, Agata Markowska-Szczupak1,4, Ewa Kowalska1,3.
Abstract
Commercial titania photocatalysts were modified with silver and gold by photodeposition, and characterized by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS), X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). It was found that silver co-existed in zero valent (core) and oxidized (shell) forms, whereas gold was mainly zero valent. The obtained noble metal-modified samples were examined with regard to antibacterial (Escherichia coli (E. coli)) and antifungal (Aspergillus niger (A. niger), Aspergillus melleus (A. melleus), Penicillium chrysogenum (P. chrysogenum), Candida albicans (C. albicans)) activity under visible-light irradiation and in the dark using disk diffusion, suspension, colony growth ("poisoned food") and sporulation methods. It was found that silver-modified titania, besides remarkably high antibacterial activity (inhibition of bacterial proliferation), could also decompose bacterial cells under visible-light irradiation, possibly due to an enhanced generation of reactive oxygen species and the intrinsic properties of silver. Gold-modified samples were almost inactive against bacteria in the dark, whereas significant bactericidal effect under visible-light irradiation suggested that the mechanism of bacteria inactivation was initiated by plasmonic excitation of titania by localized surface plasmon resonance of gold. The antifungal activity tests showed efficient suppression of mycelium growth by bare titania, and suppression of mycotoxin generation and sporulation by gold-modified titania. Although, the growth of fungi was hardly inhibited through disc diffusion (inhibition zones around discs), it indicates that gold does not penetrate into the media, and thus, a good stability of plasmonic photocatalysts has been confirmed. In summary, it was found that silver-modified titania showed superior antibacterial activity, whereas gold-modified samples were very active against fungi, suggesting that bimetallic photocatalysts containing both gold and silver should exhibit excellent antimicrobial properties.Entities:
Keywords: antifungal properties; antimicrobial properties; bactericidal effect; noble-metal nanoparticles; plasmonic photocatalysis
Year: 2018 PMID: 29600144 PMCID: PMC5852454 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.9.77
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Properties of titania photocatalysts used for metal deposition and crystallite sizes of gold and silver NPs.
| titania | phasea | sizeb/nm | ETc/mmol·g−1 | BETd/m2·g−1 | NP sizee/nm | |
| Au | Ag | |||||
| ST01 | anatase | 8f | 84f | 298f | 8 | 0.9g |
| ST41 | anatase | 205f | 25f | 11f | 29 | 20 |
| TIO12 | anatase | 6f | 111f | 290f | 14 | — |
| FP6 | anatase/r | 12 | — | 97 | — | 6 |
| TIO6 | rutile | 15f | 242f | 100f | 14 | — |
| STF10 | rutile/a | 102 | 71f | 12f | 23 | 22 |
acrystal phase (r: small content of rutile and a: small content of anatase), bcrystallite size of the dominant titania phase, ccontent of electron traps, dspecific surface area, ecrystallite size of metal NPs, f,gdata reported previously in [56–57], respectively.
Figure 1STEM images of modified titania samples: (a) Ag/TiO2(ST01), (b) Au/TiO2(ST01), (c) Ag/TiO2(ST41) and (d) Au/TiO2(ST41).
Figure 2XPS spectra for bare (top left) and gold-modified (bottom left) TiO2(ST01) sample, and deconvoluted peaks of Au 4f7/2 (center) and Ag 3d5/2 (right) for metal-modified ST01 (top) and ST41 (bottom).
Figure 3XRD patterns of Ag/TiO2(FP6): (left) original pattern, and (right) after subtraction of titania peaks.
Figure 4DRS spectra of Ag/TiO2(FP6) and Au/TiO2(TIO12) taken with BaSO4 (left) and respective bare titania (right) as a reference.
Figure 5SEM images of the decomposition of bacterial cells under vis (λ > 420 nm) irradiation on Ag/TiO2(ST41) photocatalyst.
Figure 6Number of E. coli bacteria (closed symbols) and evolution of CO2 (open symbols) during inactivation of bacterial cells in the dark (grey symbols) and under vis irradiation (λ > 420 nm; green symbols) on bare (squares) and modified titania (circles): (left) TiO2(ST01) and Ag/TiO2(ST01), (right) TiO2(FP6) and Ag/TiO2(FP6).
Figure 7(top) Antifungal properties of bare and gold-modified titania ST01 by a comparison of diameters of colonies after four days of growth (n = 6, mean ± S. D.), and (bottom) representative photograph of P. chrysogenum cultivated for four days under fluorescent-light irradiation. Arrowheads indicate the droplets.
Figure 8Sporulation after five days of growth of P. chrysogenum (top) and A. melleus (bottom) under vis light (left) and in the dark (right).