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A green dry route for antibacterial nanofinishing of textiles

Hontañón, Esther ; Kruis, Einar ; Blanes, María ; Santos, Laura ; Ludvigsson, Linus LU ; Persson, Axel R. LU orcid and Messing, Maria E. LU (2015) World Congress on New Technologies, NewTech 2015 In Proceedings of the World Congress on New Technologies
Abstract

In this paper, an aerosol-based process is proven for imparting antibacterial property to textiles. Nanoparticles of copper and silver are produced by means of glow discharge between two electrodes in nitrogen at atmospheric pressure and passed through fabrics of cotton and polyester which act as filter media. The bactericidal performance of the nanofinished fabrics is assessed against Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus and Gramnegative Klebsiella pneumonia bacteria. Nanoparticle loads of about 0.3 g/m2 (~ 0.2 wt %) give strong antibacterial activity to the fabrics regardless of particle composition and size. Higher loads do not enhance the bactericide property but affect the colour and hand feel of the fabrics. Cotton and... (More)

In this paper, an aerosol-based process is proven for imparting antibacterial property to textiles. Nanoparticles of copper and silver are produced by means of glow discharge between two electrodes in nitrogen at atmospheric pressure and passed through fabrics of cotton and polyester which act as filter media. The bactericidal performance of the nanofinished fabrics is assessed against Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus and Gramnegative Klebsiella pneumonia bacteria. Nanoparticle loads of about 0.3 g/m2 (~ 0.2 wt %) give strong antibacterial activity to the fabrics regardless of particle composition and size. Higher loads do not enhance the bactericide property but affect the colour and hand feel of the fabrics. Cotton and polyester fabrics with low loads (<0.3 g/m2) of small silver nanoparticles (<10 nm) show different bactericidal behaviour. Polyester fabrics attain good antibacterial activity for SA and KP, which is retained (KP) or decreases (SA) after washing. Cotton fabrics show hardly bactericidal property but, in some cases, it increases after washing.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Aerosol filtration, Antibacterial activity, Glow discharge, Metal nanoparticles, Textile nanofinishing, Washing durability
host publication
Proceedings of the World Congress on New Technologies (NewTech 2015)
series title
Proceedings of the World Congress on New Technologies
article number
418
conference name
World Congress on New Technologies, NewTech 2015
conference location
Barcelona, Spain
conference dates
2015-07-15 - 2015-07-17
external identifiers
  • scopus:85100779645
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7d06585d-1b2e-4abe-97eb-5b7f824d2a63
alternative location
http://www.avestia.com/NewTech2015_Proceedings/files/papers/ICNFA418.pdf
date added to LUP
2021-03-05 12:44:23
date last changed
2023-08-29 17:04:04
@inproceedings{7d06585d-1b2e-4abe-97eb-5b7f824d2a63,
  abstract     = {{<p>In this paper, an aerosol-based process is proven for imparting antibacterial property to textiles. Nanoparticles of copper and silver are produced by means of glow discharge between two electrodes in nitrogen at atmospheric pressure and passed through fabrics of cotton and polyester which act as filter media. The bactericidal performance of the nanofinished fabrics is assessed against Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus and Gramnegative Klebsiella pneumonia bacteria. Nanoparticle loads of about 0.3 g/m<sup>2</sup> (~ 0.2 wt %) give strong antibacterial activity to the fabrics regardless of particle composition and size. Higher loads do not enhance the bactericide property but affect the colour and hand feel of the fabrics. Cotton and polyester fabrics with low loads (&lt;0.3 g/m<sup>2</sup>) of small silver nanoparticles (&lt;10 nm) show different bactericidal behaviour. Polyester fabrics attain good antibacterial activity for SA and KP, which is retained (KP) or decreases (SA) after washing. Cotton fabrics show hardly bactericidal property but, in some cases, it increases after washing.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hontañón, Esther and Kruis, Einar and Blanes, María and Santos, Laura and Ludvigsson, Linus and Persson, Axel R. and Messing, Maria E.}},
  booktitle    = {{Proceedings of the World Congress on New Technologies (NewTech 2015)}},
  keywords     = {{Aerosol filtration; Antibacterial activity; Glow discharge; Metal nanoparticles; Textile nanofinishing; Washing durability}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  series       = {{Proceedings of the World Congress on New Technologies}},
  title        = {{A green dry route for antibacterial nanofinishing of textiles}},
  url          = {{http://www.avestia.com/NewTech2015_Proceedings/files/papers/ICNFA418.pdf}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}