Exposure media a critical factor for controlling dissolution of CuO nanoparticles
Source
Journal of Nanoparticle Research
Author(s)
S., Chakraborty, Swaroop
A., Nair, Ashwathi
M., Paliwal, Manas
A.D., Dybowska, Agnieszka D.
Abstract
Dissolution is an important property that influences nanoparticle abundance and biological responses, and often becomes a critical factor in determining the safety of nanoparticles. In our study, the dissolution behavior of commercial (c-CuO) and synthesized CuO (s-CuO) nanoparticles, of size 31 � 4�nm and 7 � 1�nm, respectively, in a range of simulated aqueous media (artificial sea water, artificial lysosomal fluid, simulated body fluid, and 1�mM NaNO <inf>3</inf> ) was assessed. The study demonstrated significant differences in the dissolution behavior of the nanoparticles based on the exposure concentration and exposure media. In biological media, both c-CuO and s-CuO demonstrated more than 80% dissolution within 12 to 24�h as compared to less than 15% dissolution in environmental media over the 7-day period. Due to the inherent size difference between c-CuO and s-CuO nanoparticles, the rate of dissolution was found to be higher in the case of s-CuO nanoparticles. To validate the role of dissolution, the microbial response of CuO nanoparticles and its ionic species was evaluated on E. coli. This study highlights the interplay between particulate and ionic form and experimentally validates how the suspension media acts as a critical factor governing the solubility of nanoparticles. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]. � 2019 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords
Copper oxides
Dissolution
Escherichia coli
Nanoparticles
Safety factor
Seawater
Sodium nitrate
Solubility
Synthesis (chemical)
Anti-microbial effects
CuO nanoparticles
Environmental fate
Environmental safety
Simulated media
Transformation
Nitrogen compounds
copper oxide nanoparticle
sea water
sodium nitrate
aqueous medium
aqueous solution
Article
body fluid
concentration (parameters)
dissolution
lysosomal fluid
lysosome
particle size
priority journal
simulation
validation process
