Cu and CuO nanoparticles immobilized by silica thin films as antibacterial materials and photocatalysts

Abstract CuO nanoparticles with average diameter of about 20 nm were accumulated on surface of sol–gel silica thin films heat treated at 300 °C in air. Heat treatment of the CuO nanoparticles at 600 °C in a reducing environment resulted in effective reduction of the nanoparticles and penetration of them into the film. While the thin films heat treated at 300 °C exhibited a strong antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli bacteria, the reducing process decreased their antibacterial activity. However, by definition of normalized antibacterial activity (antibacterial activity/surface concentration of coppers) it was found that Cu nanoparticles were more toxic to the bacteria than the CuO nanoparticles (by a factor of ∼ 2.1). Thus, the lower antibacterial activity of the reduced thin films was assigned to diffusion of the initially accumulated copper-based nanoparticles into the film. The CuO nanoparticles also exhibited a slight photocatalytic activity for inactivation of the bacteria (∼ 22% improvement in their antibacterial activity). Instead, the normalized antibacterial activity of the Cu nanoparticles covered by a thin oxide layer highly increased (∼ 63% improvement) in the photocatalytic process. A mechanism was also proposed to describe the better antibacterial activity of the Cu than CuO nanoparticles in dark and under light irradiation.

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