RESUMO
A synthetic approach has been developed to prepare silica gel monoliths that embed well separated silver or gold spherical nanoparticles (NP), with diameters of 8, 18 and 115 nm. Fe3+, O2/cysteine and HNO3 were all successfully used to oxidize and remove silver NP from silica, while aqua regia was necessary for gold NP. In all cases, NP-imprinted silica gel materials were obtained, with spherical voids of the same dimensions of the dissolved particles. By grinding the monoliths, we prepared NP-imprinted silica powders that were able to efficiently reuptake silver ultrafine NP (Ag-ufNP, d = 8 nm) from aqueous solutions. Moreover, the NP-imprinted silica powders showed a remarkable size selectivity, based on the best match between NP radius and the curvature radius of the cavities, driven by the optimization of attractive Van der Waals forces between SiO2 and NP. Ag-ufNP are increasingly used in products, goods, medical devices, disinfectants, and their consequent diffusion in the environment is of rising concern. Although limited here to a proof-of-concept level, the materials and methods described in this paper may be an efficient solution for capturing Ag-ufNP from environmental waters and to safely dispose them.
RESUMO
While silver nanoparticles (AgNP) are used in topical treatments and medical devices for humans, no smooth, safe remedy exists to remove them and avoid possible post-treatment uptake in the body. We show here that cysteamine hydrochloride (CYSâHCl), a simple FDA and EMA approved molecule, is able to dramatically accelerate the otherwise extremely slow oxidation of citrate-coated AgNP by O2 in a wide range of pH, including the physiological 7.4 value, obtaining the halving of AgNP concentration in t < 10 min. The dependence of oxidation kinetics on CYS concentration and pH is studied, finding faster processes on increasing CYS and basicity, despite the decrease of O2 reduction potential. Complexation and electrochemical studies demonstrate that CYS adhesion to AgNP surface followed by formation of 1:2 Ag+:CYS complex is the driving force for the AgNP oxidation, this also giving a definitive explanation to the otherwise still unclear phenomenon of AgNP etching by thiols. The efficacy of CYSâHCl is verified also on AgNP coated with pectin and PEG-SH, and on AgNP immobilized on surfaces.