| Literature DB >> 32717864 |
Andrea Fiorati1, Arianna Bellingeri2, Carlo Punta1, Ilaria Corsi2, Iole Venditti3.
Abstract
Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are widely used as engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) in many advanced nanotechnologies, due to their versatile, easy and cheap preparations combined with peculiar chemical-physical properties. Their increased production and integration in environmental applications including water treatment raise concerns for their impact on humans and the environment. An eco-design strategy that makes it possible to combine the best material performances with no risk for the natural ecosystems and living beings has been recently proposed. This review envisages potential hybrid solutions of AgNPs for water pollution monitoring and remediation to satisfy their successful, environmentally safe (ecosafe) application. Being extremely efficient in pollutants sensing and degradation, their ecosafe application can be achieved in combination with polymeric-based materials, especially with cellulose, by following an eco-design approach. In fact, (AgNPs)-cellulose hybrids have the double advantage of being easily produced using recycled material, with low costs and possible reuse, and of being ecosafe, if properly designed. An updated view of the use and prospects of these advanced hybrids AgNP-based materials is provided, which will surely speed their environmental application with consequent significant economic and environmental impact.Entities:
Keywords: eco-design; ecosafety; ecotoxicology; engineered nanomaterials; nanocellulose; silver nanoparticles; water monitoring; water treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32717864 PMCID: PMC7465245 DOI: 10.3390/polym12081635
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Synthesizing Ag nanostructures: (A) spheres, (B) cubes, (C) stars and (D) rods. Reprinted with permission from [68,81,88].
Figure 2Scheme of main functionalization strategies for AgNPs.
Main morphologies reported with dimension, surface functionalities and application for water pollution monitoring and treatments.
| Shape | Dimension (nm) | Surface Functionalization | Detection and Monitoring of Pollutant | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| 10–15 | chalcone carboxylic acid | Cd(II) | [ | |
| 5–8 | sodium 3-mercapto- 1-propanesulfonate | Co (II); | [ | |
| - | methyl cellulose | Cu (II) | [ | |
| 10–20 | Riboflavin | Hg (II) | [ | |
| 5–8 | Citrate/L-cysteine | Hg (II) | [ | |
| 10–15 | ciclodextrin | Hg (II) | [ | |
| 6 | Thiol terminated chitosan | Hg (II) | [ | |
| 20 | polyvinyl alcohol | Pb(II) | [ | |
| 9–10 | gluconate | Pb(II) | [ | |
| 2 | polyethyleneimine (PEI) | p-nitrophenol | [ | |
| 5–10 | thioglycolic acid | 6-benzylaminopurine | [ | |
| - | citrate+hexapeptide | Malathion 1 | [ | |
| 8–10 | cyclen dithiocarbamate- | Thiram; paraquat 1 | [ | |
|
| ||||
| 100 | Poly(vinylpyrrolidone) | Paraoxon; thiram 1 | [ | |
| 200 | glycolaldeyde | - | [ | |
| 90–100 | cetyltrimethylammoniumcloride | - | [ | |
| 40–80 | Poly(vinylpyrrolidone) | - | [ | |
| 200–300 | polyaniline | hemoglobin | [ | |
| 60–100 | hexamine | Bis phenol | [ | |
|
| ||||
| glucose | [ | |||
| 50–150 | Lauryl sulfobetaine | Melamine | [ | |
| 180–250 | Citrate/hydroxylamine | Congo Red | [ | |
|
| ||||
| 150–250 | -- | antibiotic | [ | |
| -- | Cy5-ssDNA | Hg(II) | [ | |
| 30–200 | -- | Polyclorinated biphenyls | [ | |
| 10–20 | poly(ethylene glycol) | mitoxantrone | [ |
1 Pesticides.
AgNP-based hybrid systems used for water pollution treatments.
| AgNPs Size (nm) | Support | Treatment | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5–10 | photocrosslinked matrix | nitroderivates | [ |
| 10–20 | BiVO4 | crystal violet; Rhodamine B | [ |
| 10–30 | sulfonated graphene/TiO2 | Rhodamine B; Methyl Orange; 4-nitrophenol | [ |
| 10 | Methylene blue | [ | |
| 5–10 | TiO2 | Methyl Orange | [ |
| 100 | cellulose nanofibrils | Rhodamine B; | [ |
Figure 3Schematic representation of the distribution of taxa investigated in aquatic ecotoxicity studies with AgNPs up to 2019 (Scopus source). Total number of studies was 282.
Figure 4The eco-design concept based on ecotoxicological risk assessment as a tool for eco-design achievement [158].
Figure 5Testing of AgNPcitLcys for algal toxicity resulted in low release of silver ions and no inhibition of algal growth, from both fresh- and marine waters [54].
Figure 6(A) Cellulose sources and polymer structure; (B) hierarchical structure of cellulose nanofibers.
Figure 7Process scheme for the in situ production of AgNPs/cellulose composites for water treatment.