| Literature DB >> 35407269 |
Mihaela Răcuciu1, Lucian Barbu-Tudoran2,3, Simona Oancea4, Olga Drăghici4, Cezarina Morosanu5, Marian Grigoras6, Florin Brînză5, Dorina E Creangă5.
Abstract
Aspartic acid stabilized iron oxide nanoparticles (A-IONPs) with globular shape and narrow size distribution were prepared by the co-precipitation method in aqueous medium. A quantum-mechanical approach to aspartic acid optimized structure displayed negative charged sites, relatively high dipole moment, and hydrophilicity, which recommended it for interaction with iron cations and surrounding water electrical dipoles. A-IONPs were characterized by TEM, XRD, ATR-FTIR, EDS, DSC, TG, DLS, NTA, and VSM techniques. Theoretical study carried out by applying Hartree-Fock and density functional algorithms suggested that some aspartic acid properties related to the interaction can develop with nanoparticles and water molecules. The results of experimental investigation showed that the mean value of particle physical diameters was 9.17 ± 2.2 nm according to TEM image analysis, the crystallite size was about 8.9 nm according to XRD data, while the magnetic diameter was about 8.8 nm, as was determined from VSM data interpretation with Langevin's theory. The A-IONP suspension was characterized by zeta-potential of about -11.7 mV, while the NTA investigation revealed a hydrodynamic diameter of 153.9 nm. These results recommend the A-IONP suspension for biomedical applications.Entities:
Keywords: L-aspartic acid; iron oxide nanoparticles; nanoparticles size; nanoparticles synthesis; physical and chemical characterization
Year: 2022 PMID: 35407269 PMCID: PMC9000734 DOI: 10.3390/nano12071151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Electric charge distribution corresponding to optimized molecular structure in the two quantum-chemical approaches: (a) Hartree-Fock, (b) Density-Functional methods. Arrow represents the direction of the electrical dipole moment.
Figure 2Electrostatic potential map generated with Hartree-Fock (a) and Density Functional (b) methods.
Figure 3TEM image of iron-oxide nanoparticles (scale bar = 60 nm).
Figure 4The size distribution of iron-oxide nanoparticles on 336 particles from 14 different TEM pictures.
Figure 5EDS pattern of the synthesized A-IONPs.
Figure 6X-ray diffraction pattern of the synthesized A-IONPs.
Figure 7Magnetization curve of the synthesized A-IONPs.
Figure 8Simulated vibrational spectrum of aspartic acid (Density Functional).
Figure 9ATR-FTIR pattern of the synthesized A-IONPs.
Figure 10Zeta potential distribution for A-IONPs sample.
Figure 11NTA results for A-IONPs dimensional distribution.
Figure 12Heat flow (W/g) and weight loss (%) of A-IONPs sample.