Metal nanoparticle-hydrogel nanocomposites for biomedical applications - An atmospheric pressure plasma synthesis approach
Nolan, Hugo and Sun, Daye and Falzon, Brian G and Chakrabarti, Supriya and Padmanaban, Dilli babu and Maguire, Paul and Mariotti, Davide and Yu, Tao and Sun, Dan (2018) Metal nanoparticle-hydrogel nanocomposites for biomedical applications - An atmospheric pressure plasma synthesis approach. Plasma Processes and Polymers. 1800112. ISSN 1612-8869 (https://doi.org/10.1002/ppap.201800112)
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Abstract
The development of multifunctional nanocomposite materials is of great interest for various biomedical applications. A popular approach to produce tailored nanocomposites is to incorporate functional nanoparticles into hydrogels. Here, a benign atmospheric pressure microplasma synthesis approach has been deployed for the synthesis of metal and alloy NPs in-situ in a poly (vinyl alcohol) hydrogel. The formation of gold, silver, and gold-silver alloy NPs was confirmed via spectroscopic and microscopic characterization techniques. The properties of the hydrogel were not compromised during formation of the composites. Practical applications of the NP/PVA nanocomposites has been demonstrated by anti-bacterial testing. This establishes AMP processing as a viable one-step technique for the fabrication of NP/hydrogel composites, with potential multifunctionality for a range of biomedical applications.
ORCID iDs
Nolan, Hugo, Sun, Daye, Falzon, Brian G, Chakrabarti, Supriya, Padmanaban, Dilli babu, Maguire, Paul, Mariotti, Davide
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Item type: Article ID code: 89311 Dates: DateEventNovember 2018Published9 October 2018Published OnlineSubjects: Science > Physics > Plasma physics. Ionized gases Department: Faculty of Engineering > Design, Manufacture and Engineering Management Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 20 May 2024 14:15 Last modified: 05 Feb 2025 05:01 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/89311