| Literature DB >> 35267708 |
Xiaohan Dai1, Yanran Qi1, Hongxue Luo1, Zaixin He1, Lianxiang Wei1, Xiaoying Dong1, Xingxia Ma2, De-Quan Yang3, Yongfeng Li1.
Abstract
Water-based antimicrobial agents, used in environmentally friendly applications, are widely used in wood protection industries. Furthermore, nanomaterials as antimicrobial agents, because of their biocidal component, huge specific surface area, and unique nanoscale effect, have attracted attention in the field of biodurability. We employed aqueous dispersed nano-silver with a diameter of 10 nm~20 nm to treat poplar wood and evaluated its leaching resistance and anti-mold effect on the wood surface. The results revealed that the higher the retention of the nano-silver, the stronger the protection efficiency of the wood surface against three molds (Aspergillus niger V. Tiegh, Penicillium citrinum Thom, and Trichoderma viride Pers. ex Fr); and the leachability of the nano-silver presented a slowly growing trend with the increase in the retention. When the wood surface attained a silver retention of 0.324 g·m-2, its anti-mold efficiency against Aspergillus niger V. Tiegh, Penicillium citrinum Thom, and Trichoderma viride Pers. ex Fr reached 80, 75, and 80%, respectively, which achieved or even exceeded the required standard value of effective mold inhibition (75%). Notably, the nano-silver leaching rate at this retention attained merely 4.75 %. The nanoparticle, well distributed on a wood surface, may promote sufficient contact with fungi as well as strong interaction with wood cell wall components, which probably contributed to the effective anti-mold efficiency and the leaching resistance. This study provided positive evidence for the anti-mold effect of nano-silver on wood surface.Entities:
Keywords: leachability; mold; protective efficiency; silver nanoparticle; wood surface
Year: 2022 PMID: 35267708 PMCID: PMC8912404 DOI: 10.3390/polym14050884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.967
Classification of the infection value.
| Infection Value | Infection Area |
|---|---|
| 0 | Without hypha on surface |
| 1 | Infection area < 1/4 |
| 2 | Infection area 1/4~1/2 |
| 3 | Infection area 1/2~3/4 |
| 4 | Infection area > 3/4 |
Figure 1Growth inhibition of the three molds by nano-Ag and control group (CK) in the medium: (a) Growth of Aspergillus niger with time at different nano-Ag concentrations (CK, Ag2, Ag20, Ag200, Ag500, Ag700); (b) Digital photos of Aspergillus niger after growth for 28 days at different nano-Ag concentrations; (c) Growth inhibition rate of Aspergillus niger at different nano-Ag concentrations; (d) Growth of Penicillium citrinum with time at different nano-Ag concentrations; (e) Digital photos of Penicillium citrinum after 28 days of growth at different nano-Ag concentrations; (f) Growth inhibition rate of Penicillium citrinum at different nano-Ag concentrations; (g) Growth of Trichoderma viride with time at different nano-Ag concentrations; (h) Digital photos of Trichoderma viride after 28 days of growth at different nano-Ag concentrations; (i) Growth inhibition rate of Trichoderma viride at different nano-Ag concentrations.
Figure 2Relationships among retention and leaching rates of nano-Ag on wood surface and its concentration: (a) variation of nano-Ag retention with its concentration; (b) variation of nano-Ag leaching rate with its retention.
Figure 3Growth inhibition of nano-Ag against Aspergillus niger on wood surface: (a) Variation of infection values of Aspergillus niger on wood surface with time under different nano-Ag concentrations (correspond to retentions, shown in Figure 2); (b) Digital photos of Aspergillus niger on wood surface after 28-day growth period under different nano-Ag concentrations (in the same Petri dish: left—CK; right—nano-Ag treated sample); (c) Protection efficiency of nano-Ag against Aspergillus niger on wood surface under different nano-Ag concentrations; (d) SEM morphologies of the surfaces of CK wood and the wood treated by nano-Ag with 1000 ppm concentration after the fungal infection.
Figure 4Growth inhibition of nano-silver against Penicillium citrinum on wood surface: (a) Variation of infection values of Penicillium citrinum on wood surface with time under different nano-silver concentrations (correspond to retentions, shown in Figure 2); (b) Protection efficiency of nano-silver against Penicillium citrinum on wood surface under different nano-silver concentrations; (c) Digital photos of Penicillium citrinum on wood surface after 28-day growth period under different nano-silver concentrations (in the same Petri dish: left—CK; right—nano-silver treated sample); (d) SEM morphologies of the surfaces of CK wood and the wood treated by nano-silver with 1000 ppm concentration after Penicillium citrinum infection.
Figure 5Growth inhibition of nano-silver against Trichoderma viride on wood surface: (a) Variation of infection values of Trichoderma viride on wood surface with time under different nano-silver concentrations (correspond to retentions, shown in Figure 2); (b) Protection efficiency of nano-silver against Trichoderma viride on wood surface under different nano-silver concentrations; (c) Digital photos of Trichoderma viride on wood surface after 28-day growth under different nano-silver concentrations (in the same Petri dish: left—CK; right—nano-silver treated sample); (d) SEM morphologies of the surfaces of CK wood and the wood treated by nano-silver with 1000 ppm concentration after Trichoderma viride infection.
Figure 6Morphologies of the nano-Ag agent: (a) TEM morphology of the nano-Ag (10 nm~20 nm) from Ag nanoparticles dispersion; (b) SEM morphology of the nano-Ag distributed on the surface of wood cell wall (1000 ppm).