Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media

Abstract The stability of nanoparticles and their supports are critical, but poorly understood, parameters for applications of such systems in liquid environments. Here we develop an approach to systematically investigate the stability of aerosol-generated nanoparticles after exposure to commonly us...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sara M. Franzén, Magdalena Tasić, Christian B. M. Poulie, Martin H. Magnusson, Daniel Strand, Maria E. Messing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-04-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-88510-2
id doaj-f23ba06bf5d0485588a6e75a1478c12d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f23ba06bf5d0485588a6e75a1478c12d2021-05-02T11:33:32ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-04-011111910.1038/s41598-021-88510-2Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid mediaSara M. Franzén0Magdalena Tasić1Christian B. M. Poulie2Martin H. Magnusson3Daniel Strand4Maria E. Messing5NanoLund, Lund UniversityCentre for Analysis and Synthesis, Lund UniversityCentre for Analysis and Synthesis, Lund UniversityNanoLund, Lund UniversityCentre for Analysis and Synthesis, Lund UniversityNanoLund, Lund UniversityAbstract The stability of nanoparticles and their supports are critical, but poorly understood, parameters for applications of such systems in liquid environments. Here we develop an approach to systematically investigate the stability of aerosol-generated nanoparticles after exposure to commonly used solvents using a combination of identical location-SEM and density/size analysis. We demonstrate that the choice of solvent needs to be carefully matched with both the particle and support materials. We show that thermal annealing significantly increases the adhesion of the particles and expands the scope of applications in aqueous media and for biological applications. The results clarify combinations of inorganic nanoparticles on oxide and semiconductor supports with solvents and environmental conditions that give sufficient stability. Combined, the presented methods should be of value in investigating the stability of nanoparticle systems after exposure to solvent and can be used for future developments of high-performing supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles for solvent-based applications.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-88510-2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sara M. Franzén
Magdalena Tasić
Christian B. M. Poulie
Martin H. Magnusson
Daniel Strand
Maria E. Messing
spellingShingle Sara M. Franzén
Magdalena Tasić
Christian B. M. Poulie
Martin H. Magnusson
Daniel Strand
Maria E. Messing
Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
Scientific Reports
author_facet Sara M. Franzén
Magdalena Tasić
Christian B. M. Poulie
Martin H. Magnusson
Daniel Strand
Maria E. Messing
author_sort Sara M. Franzén
title Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
title_short Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
title_full Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
title_fullStr Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
title_full_unstemmed Stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
title_sort stability of supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles in liquid media
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract The stability of nanoparticles and their supports are critical, but poorly understood, parameters for applications of such systems in liquid environments. Here we develop an approach to systematically investigate the stability of aerosol-generated nanoparticles after exposure to commonly used solvents using a combination of identical location-SEM and density/size analysis. We demonstrate that the choice of solvent needs to be carefully matched with both the particle and support materials. We show that thermal annealing significantly increases the adhesion of the particles and expands the scope of applications in aqueous media and for biological applications. The results clarify combinations of inorganic nanoparticles on oxide and semiconductor supports with solvents and environmental conditions that give sufficient stability. Combined, the presented methods should be of value in investigating the stability of nanoparticle systems after exposure to solvent and can be used for future developments of high-performing supported aerosol-generated nanoparticles for solvent-based applications.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-88510-2
work_keys_str_mv AT saramfranzen stabilityofsupportedaerosolgeneratednanoparticlesinliquidmedia
AT magdalenatasic stabilityofsupportedaerosolgeneratednanoparticlesinliquidmedia
AT christianbmpoulie stabilityofsupportedaerosolgeneratednanoparticlesinliquidmedia
AT martinhmagnusson stabilityofsupportedaerosolgeneratednanoparticlesinliquidmedia
AT danielstrand stabilityofsupportedaerosolgeneratednanoparticlesinliquidmedia
AT mariaemessing stabilityofsupportedaerosolgeneratednanoparticlesinliquidmedia
_version_ 1721492131663577088