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The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology

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dc.contributor.author Radebe, N
dc.contributor.author Thwala, Melusi
dc.contributor.author Cele, LM
dc.contributor.author Sikhwivhilu, L
dc.contributor.author Musee, N
dc.contributor.author Shumbula, P
dc.date.accessioned 2014-03-25T06:41:32Z
dc.date.available 2014-03-25T06:41:32Z
dc.date.issued 2013-08
dc.identifier.citation Radebe, N., Thwala, M., Cele, L.M., Sikhwivhilu, L., Musee, N., and Shumbula, P. 2013. The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology. In: First Human Capital Development Workshop for Nanotechnologies and Nanosciences Risk Assessment, Pretoria, CSIR Knowledge Commons, 13 August 2013 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7294
dc.description First Human Capital Development Workshop for Nanotechnologies and Nanosciences Risk Assessment, Pretoria, CSIR Knowledge Commons, 13 August 2013 en_US
dc.description.abstract The current study seeks to investigate the dissolution dynamics of silver (nAg) and zinc oxide (nZnO) engineered nanoparticles (ENPs), and how this affects their uptake by aquatic higher plants. First, the influence of particle size and morphology on the stability of nAg and nZnO in Hoagland’s nutrient medium will be investigated. The nutrient medium will be dosed with ENPs concentrations ranging from 1-1000 µg/L whereby the dissolved metal ions will be quantified using the ICP-OES with a detection limit of 1 µg/L. Dry powder ENPs will be characterised for size, size distribution, and morphology using TEM, surface area using BET, surface charge using Zetasizer, and surface crystallinity using XRD. In Hoagland’s media, the ENPs hydrodynamic size and surface charge as well as particle counts will be determined using Zetasizer and NTA, respectively. Secondly, the study will investigate the uptake dynamics of nAg and nZnO by an aquatic higher plant Spirodela punctuta, and evaluate their toxicity over a 20 day period. The role of hydrodynamic size, particle morphology as well as media ionic strength on ENP uptake and toxicity will be examined. Uptake investigations will be undertaken through SEM imaging inspection of plant sections whilst OxiSelect assay kits will be used to evaluate catalase activity, protein carbonyls, and free radical activity to ascertain potential ENPs linked induced toxicity. Through timeous analysis of chemical and physical state of ENPs, the proposed study envisages to generate detailed data useful to support sound hazard assessment and ultimately the risk assessment of metallic- and metal oxide-ENPs towards higher aquatic plants. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries Workflow;12226
dc.subject Engineered nanoparticles en_US
dc.subject ENP's en_US
dc.subject Inductively Coupled-Optical Emission Spectroscopy en_US
dc.subject ICO-OES en_US
dc.subject Transmission electron microscope en_US
dc.subject TEM en_US
dc.subject X-ray diffraction en_US
dc.subject XRD en_US
dc.subject Brunauer-Emmett-Teller en_US
dc.subject BET en_US
dc.subject Nanotracking analysis en_US
dc.subject NTA en_US
dc.subject Scanning electron microscope en_US
dc.subject SEM en_US
dc.subject Metallic nanoparticles en_US
dc.subject Nanoparticle characterisation en_US
dc.subject Particle stability en_US
dc.subject Risk assessment en_US
dc.title The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology en_US
dc.type Conference Presentation en_US
dc.identifier.apacitation Radebe, N., Thwala, M., Cele, L., Sikhwivhilu, L., Musee, N., & Shumbula, P. (2013). The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7294 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Radebe, N, Melusi Thwala, LM Cele, L Sikhwivhilu, N Musee, and P Shumbula. "The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology." (2013): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7294 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Radebe N, Thwala M, Cele L, Sikhwivhilu L, Musee N, Shumbula P, The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology; 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7294 . en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Conference Presentation AU - Radebe, N AU - Thwala, Melusi AU - Cele, LM AU - Sikhwivhilu, L AU - Musee, N AU - Shumbula, P AB - The current study seeks to investigate the dissolution dynamics of silver (nAg) and zinc oxide (nZnO) engineered nanoparticles (ENPs), and how this affects their uptake by aquatic higher plants. First, the influence of particle size and morphology on the stability of nAg and nZnO in Hoagland’s nutrient medium will be investigated. The nutrient medium will be dosed with ENPs concentrations ranging from 1-1000 µg/L whereby the dissolved metal ions will be quantified using the ICP-OES with a detection limit of 1 µg/L. Dry powder ENPs will be characterised for size, size distribution, and morphology using TEM, surface area using BET, surface charge using Zetasizer, and surface crystallinity using XRD. In Hoagland’s media, the ENPs hydrodynamic size and surface charge as well as particle counts will be determined using Zetasizer and NTA, respectively. Secondly, the study will investigate the uptake dynamics of nAg and nZnO by an aquatic higher plant Spirodela punctuta, and evaluate their toxicity over a 20 day period. The role of hydrodynamic size, particle morphology as well as media ionic strength on ENP uptake and toxicity will be examined. Uptake investigations will be undertaken through SEM imaging inspection of plant sections whilst OxiSelect assay kits will be used to evaluate catalase activity, protein carbonyls, and free radical activity to ascertain potential ENPs linked induced toxicity. Through timeous analysis of chemical and physical state of ENPs, the proposed study envisages to generate detailed data useful to support sound hazard assessment and ultimately the risk assessment of metallic- and metal oxide-ENPs towards higher aquatic plants. DA - 2013-08 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Engineered nanoparticles KW - ENP's KW - Inductively Coupled-Optical Emission Spectroscopy KW - ICO-OES KW - Transmission electron microscope KW - TEM KW - X-ray diffraction KW - XRD KW - Brunauer-Emmett-Teller KW - BET KW - Nanotracking analysis KW - NTA KW - Scanning electron microscope KW - SEM KW - Metallic nanoparticles KW - Nanoparticle characterisation KW - Particle stability KW - Risk assessment LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2013 T1 - The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology TI - The stability of Ag and ZnO engineered nanoparticles in Hoagland's nutrient water: the role of particle size and morphology UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/7294 ER - en_ZA


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