Publication

Antibacterial surfaces based on functionally graded photocatalytic Fe3O4@TiO2 core-shell nanoparticle/epoxy composites

Abstract

Functionally graded epoxy composites with various concentration profiles of Fe3O4@TiO2 core-shell nanoparticles (NPs) were synthetized and characterized, with focus on their antibacterial properties. The NPs consisted of rutile, anatase, magnetite and hematite. Graded composites were produced starting with homogeneous 2 vol% to 12 vol% NPs suspensions using a magnetophorese process, leading to an enrichment of TiO2 at the surface of the composite up to 16 vol% from an initial 4 vol%. Homogeneous composites were also produced as references. Graded composites with an initial 4 vol% of NPs inactivated E. coli bacteria in less than 2 hours under simulated solar light (50 mW cm(-2)), significantly faster than their homogeneous analogues. During bacterial inactivation the pH decreased from 6.8 to 5.0. Repetitive E. coli inactivation tests on these 4 vol% graded composites were stable up to 8 cycles and 5 min contact between the bacteria and the sample surface was enough to guarantee an adequate bacterial adhesion.

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