Impact of Environmental Conditions (pH, Ionic Strength, and Electrolyte Type) on the Surface Charge and Aggregation of Silver Nanoparticles Suspensions
University of Cincinnati · Environmental Protection Agency
Abstract
The impact of capping agents and environmental conditions (pH, ionic strength, and background electrolytes) on surface charge and aggregation potential of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) suspensions were investigated. Capping agents are chemicals used in the synthesis of nanoparticles to prevent aggregation. The AgNPs examined in the study were as follows: (a) uncoated AgNPs (H(2)-AgNPs), (b) electrostatically stabilized (citrate and NaBH(4)-AgNPs), (c) sterically stabilized (polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP)-AgNPs), and (d) electrosterically stabilized (branched polyethyleneimine (BPEI)-AgNPs)). The uncoated (H(2)-AgNPs), the citrate, and NaBH(4)-coated AgNPs aggregated at higher ionic strengths (100 mM NaNO(3)) and/or…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
6- AMAmro M. El BadawyCorresponding
University of Cincinnati, Environmental Protection Agency
- TPTodd P. Luxton
University of Cincinnati, Environmental Protection Agency
- RGRendahandi G. Silva
Environmental Protection Agency, University of Cincinnati
- KGKirk G. Scheckel
Environmental Protection Agency, University of Cincinnati
- MTMakram T. Suidan
Environmental Protection Agency, University of Cincinnati
Topics & keywords
- Chemistry
- Silver nanoparticle
- Ionic strength
- Electrolyte
- Polyvinylpyrrolidone
- Surface charge
- Nanoparticle
- Ionic bonding