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The assembly of nanoparticles to form unique nanostructured materials is one of the
most exciting areas due to their applications in various fields. There is a need to
develop environment friendly routes to synthesize such nanomaterials with good
control over the assembly of nanoparticles.
In the current study, various template based methods have been developed to
synthesize nanostructured materials using biologically safe approaches. In this
context, natural and unmodified rhamnolipids were thermally self-assembled to form
soft microtubules, which could act as a template to produce metal nanoparticles onto
themselves due to the presence of rhamnose moieties at their surfaces. The porous
gold/silver microwires like structures with fairly controlled nanofeatures were
produced after calcination of rhamnolipids-nanoparticles composite fibers at high
temperature. Moreover, rhamnolipids were used as reducing as well as stabilizing
agent for the synthesis of highly stable gold and silver nanoparticles of fairly uniform
size. In addition to the rhamnolipids, fungal hyphae were also used as living template
to direct the organization of biocompatible gold nanoparticles, to form the fungal
hyphae-gold nanoparticles composite materials. The calcination of these composites
at high temperature led to the formation of porous gold microwire-like structures. The
gold nanoparticles, used as building blocks, for this purpose were synthesized using
tea extract as reducing and stabilizing agent. Such type of porous metal microwires
might have potential applications in catalysis, sensors and Surface-enhanced Raman
Spectroscopy (SERS).
Template assisted highly porous metals (platinum, iron oxide) and hydroxyapatite
were also prepared using polymer beads as sacrificial scaffolds. Two types of polymer
templates, synthetic (polyacrylamide) and natural (calcium alginate), were used to
direct the organization of metal and hydroxyapatite nanoparticles to produce organic-
inorganic hybrid materials. Heat treatment of such composite materials at high
temperature led to the formation of porous metals, metal oxide and hydroxyapatite
materials. Moreover, the fungal biomass was incorporated inside the polymeric matrix
of these beads to demonstrate the in situ synthesis of metal, especially gold and silver,
nanoparticles. This provides a very simple and a straightforward strategy for the
Abstract
preparation of metal-polymer composite materials and ultimately porous metals after
calcination.
Different types of nanoparticles synthesized during present study were also evaluated
to examine their role in affecting the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) efficiency. For
that matter, an optimized PCR system, used for typing of Salmonella strains, was used
to assess the effect of nanoparticles addition. In this study, three different types of
nanoparticles were used such as citrate stabilized gold nanoparticles, rhamnolipids
stabilized gold and silver nanoparticles and magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles. The
elimination of non-specific amplification was somehow reduced while using gold and
silver nanoparticles in appropriate concentration, but there was not much
improvement in PCR efficiency in terms of yield. The surface chemistry of
nanoparticles was found important for their effect on PCR. For example, citrate
stabilized gold nanoparticles enhanced the PCR efficiency to some degree but
rhamnolipid stabilized gold nanoparticles did not change the level of amplification of
same target DNA. The magnetic nanoparticles, however, were found to inhibit the
PCR under similar experimental conditions. |
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