Synthesis of Nanomaterials by the Pulsed Plasma in Liquid and their Bio-medical Applications

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Abstract

Pulsed plasma in liquid is a simple, ecologically friendly, cost-efficient method based on electrical discharge between two metal electrodes submerged into a dielectric liquid. We synthesized carbon-encapsulated Fe (Fe@C) magnetic nanoparticles with low cytotoxicity using pulsed plasma in a liquid. Body-centered cubic Fe core nanoparticles showed good crystalline structures with an average size between 20 and 30 nm were encapsulated in onion-like carbon coatings with a thickness of 2-10 nm. Thermal gravimetric analysis showed a high stability of the as-synthesized samples under thermal treatment and oxidation. Cytotoxicity measurements showed higher cancer cell viability than samples synthesized by different methods. Carbon coated ZnO nanorods with about 20 nm thickness and 150 nm length were synthesized by this method using different surfactant materials such as cetyl trimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS). Cu and Ag nanoparticles of about 10 nm in size were also synthesized by the pulsed plasma in aquatic solution of 0.2 % gelatine as surfactant material. These nanoparticles showed high antibacterial activity for Erwinia amylovora and Escherichia coli.

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Omurzak, E., Abdullaeva, Z., Satyvaldiev, A., Zhasnakunov, Z., Kelgenbaeva, Z., Adil Akai Tegin, R., … Mashimo, T. (2018). Synthesis of Nanomaterials by the Pulsed Plasma in Liquid and their Bio-medical Applications. In IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering (Vol. 302). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/302/1/012076

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