Preparation of Airborne Ag/CNT Hybrid Nanoparticles Using an Aerosol Process and Their Application to Antimicrobial Air Filtration

Authors
Jung, Jae HeeHwang, Gi ByoungLee, Jung EunBae, Gwi Nam
Issue Date
2011-08-16
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Citation
LANGMUIR, v.27, no.16, pp.10256 - 10264
Abstract
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been widely used in a variety of applications because of their unique structure and excellent mechanical and electrical properties. Additionally, silver (Ag) nanoparticles exhibit broad-spectrum biocidal activity toward many different bacteria, fungi, and viruses. In this study, we prepared Ag-coated CNT hybrid nanoparticles (Ag/CNTs) using aerosol nebulization and thermal evaporation/condensation processes and tested their usefulness for antimicrobial air filtration. Droplets were generated from a CNT suspension using a six-jet collison nebulizer, passed through a diffusion dryer to remove moisture, and entered a thermal tube furnace where silver nanoparticles were generated by thermal evaporation/condensation at similar to 980 degrees C in a nitrogen atmosphere. The CNT and Ag nanoparticle aerosols mixed together and attached to each other, forming Ag/CNTs. For physicochemical characterization, the Ag/CNTs were introduced into a scanning mobility particle sizer (SMPS) for size distribution measurements and were sampled by the nanoparticle sampler for morphological and elemental analyses. For antimicrobial air filtration applications, the airborne Ag/CNT particles generated were deposited continuously onto an air filter medium. Physical characteristics (fiber morphology, pressure drop, and filtration efficiency) and biological characteristics (antimicrobial tests against Staphylococcus epidermidis and Escherichia coli bioaerosols) were evaluated. Real-time SMPS and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) data showed that Ag nanoparticles that were <20 nm in diameter were homogeneously dispersed and adhered strongly to the CNT surfaces. Because of the attachment of Ag nanoparticles onto the CNT surfaces, the total particle surface area concentration measured by a nanoparticle surface area monitor (NSAM) was lower than the summation of each Ag nanoparticle and CNT generated. When Ag/CNTs were deposited on the surface of an air filter medium, the antimicrobial activity against test bacterial bioaerosols was enhanced, compared with the deposition of CNTs or Ag nanoparticles alone, whereas the filter pressure drop and bioaerosol filtration efficiency were similar to those of CNT deposition only. At a residence time of 2 h, the relative microbial viabilities of gram-positive S. epidermidis were similar to 13, 5, and 0.9% on the control, CNT-, Ag nanoparticle-, and Ag/CNT-deposited filters, respectively, and those of gram-negative E. coli were 13, 2.1, 0.4, and 0.1% on the control, CNTs, Ag nanoparticles, and Ag/CNTs, respectively. These Ag/CNT hybrid nanoparticles may be useful for applications in biomedical devices and antibacterial control systems.
Keywords
MULTIWALLED CARBON NANOTUBE; SMALL CERAMIC HEATER; LOCAL HEATING AREA; SILVER NANOPARTICLES; ESCHERICHIA-COLI; AG NANOPARTICLES; SURFACE-AREA; GENERATION; PARTICLES; MODEL; MULTIWALLED CARBON NANOTUBE; SMALL CERAMIC HEATER; LOCAL HEATING AREA; SILVER NANOPARTICLES; ESCHERICHIA-COLI; AG NANOPARTICLES; SURFACE-AREA; GENERATION; PARTICLES; MODEL; Hybrid Nanoparticle; Aerosol Process; Ag/CNT; Antimicrobial; Filtration
ISSN
0743-7463
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/130073
DOI
10.1021/la201851r
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2011
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