SYNTHESIS OF SILVER NANOPARTICLES USING
DISMODIUM ELLIGANCE PLANT EXTRACT AND ITS
CONJUGATION WITH POLYPYRROLE
First step involves reduction of metal ions and nucleation of reduce metal. This step is
known as activation phase. In 2nd step the small adjacent nanoparticles spontaneously coalesce
into particles of a larger size (direct formation of nanoparticles by means of heterogeneous
nucleation and growth, and further metal ion reduction; a process referred to as Ostwald
ripening), which is accompanied by an increase in the thermodynamic stability of nanoparticles.
This step is called growth phase. The 3rd step is termination phase which gives the final shape of
nanoparticles [25, 26].
There are also some other factors which affect the formation of metal ions into
nanoparticles. These factors include reaction mixture pH, incubation temperature, reaction time,
concentration, and electrochemical potential of a metal ion [4, 27-29].
Synthesis of silver nanoparticles
Synthesis by physical methods
There are many physical approaches but most important among them are evaporation-
condensation and laser ablation. Different nanoparticles like silver, gold, lead sulfide, cadmium
sulfide, and fullerene have been synthesized by using evaporation-condensation method.
Physical methods have advantages over chemical methods because of absence of solvent
contamination in prepared thin films and also nanoparticles distribution is uniform. Physical
method has some disadvantages in synthesizing nanoparticles using tube furnace at atmospheric
pressure, for example tube furnace occupies a large space, consumes a great amount of energy
while raising the environmental temperature around the source material, and requires a great deal
of time to achieve thermal stability. Further tube furnace requires power consumption more than
several kilowatts and a preheating time of several tens of minutes to reach a stable operating
temperature [30, 31].
Nanoparticles could also be synthesized using a small ceramic heater with a local heating
source. The evaporated vapor cools down at suitable rapid rate because in comparison with
temperature of tube furnace, the temperature gradient in vicinity of heater surface is very steep.
This gives formation of nanoparticles in high concentration. This physical method can be useful
as a nanoparticle generator for long-term experiments for inhalation toxicity studies, and as a
calibration device for nanoparticle measurement equipment [32].
Silver nanoparticles can also be synthesized by laser ablation of metallic bulk materials in
solution [33-37]. The ablation efficiency and the characteristics of produced nanosilver particles
depend upon many factors such as the wavelength of the laser impinging the metallic target, the
duration of the laser pulses (in the femto-, pico- and nanosecond regime), the laser fluence, the
ablation time duration and the effective liquid medium, with or without the presence of
surfactants [38-41].
Synthesis by chemical methods
Chemical reduction of sliver metal ions by organic and inorganic reducing agents is most
commonly used method to synthesize silver nanoparticles. There were different reducing agents
such as sodium citrate, ascorbate, sodium borohydride (NaBH4), elemental hydrogen, polyol
process, Tollens reagent, N, N-dimethylformamide (DMF), and poly (ethylene glycol)-block
Copolymers were used for reduction of silver ions (Ag+) in aqueous or non-aqueous solutions.
These reducing agents reduced silver ions (Ag+) and give the formation of metallic silver (Ag0),
which was then followed by agglomeration into oligomeric clusters. These clusters eventually
lead to formation of metallic colloidal silver particles [42-44].
Dodecanethiol capped silver nanoparticles were prepared using Brust procedure [45],
based on a phase transfer of an Au3+ complex from aqueous to organic phase in a two-phase
liquid-liquid system, followed by a reduction with sodium borohydride in the presence of
dodecanethiol as a stabilizing agent, binding onto the nanoparticles surfaces, thereby avoiding
their aggregation and making them soluble in certain solvents. It was reported that small changes
in synthetic factors gives interesting modifications in nanoparticle structure, average size, size
distribution width, stability and self-assembly patterns [46].
Hyperbranched poly(methylene bisacrylamide aminoethyl piperazine) was used with
terminal dimethylamine groups (HPAMAM-N(CH3)2) to give colloids of silver. The amide
moieties, piperazine rings, tertiary amine groups and the hyper-branched structure in HPAMAM-
N(CH3)2 were found important due to its stabilizing and reducing abilities [47].
UV-initiated photoreduction is another easy and simple method to synthesize silver
nanoparticles in the presence of citrate, polyvinylpyrrolidone, poly(acrylic acid), and collagen.
Silver nanoparticles were prepared by photoreduction of silver nitrate in layered inorganic
laponite clay suspensions which act as a stabilizing agent for preventing nanoparticles from
aggregation. These nanoparticles were studied as a function of UV irradiation time. When these
particles were irradiated under UV for 3 h, bimodal size distribution and relatively large silver
nanoparticles were obtained. When further irradiation was performed silver nanoparticles were
disintegrated into smaller sizes with a single distribution mode until a relatively stable size and
size distribution was obtained [48].
Silver nanoparticles (nanosphere, nanowire, and dendrite) were also prepared by an ultraviolet
irradiation photoreduction technique at room temperature using poly(vinylalcohol) (as protecting
and stabilizing agent). Concentration of both poly(vinylalcohol) and silver nitrate played
important role in the growth of the nanorods and dendrites [49].
Nano-sized silver particles with an average size of 8 nm were synthesized by
photoinduced reduction using poly(styrene sulfonate)/poly(allylamine hydrochloride)
polyelectrolyte capsules as microreactors [50]. Moreover, it was demonstrated that photoinduced
method could be used for converting silver nanospheres into triangular silver nanocrystals
(nanoprisms) with desired edge lengths in the range of 30-120 nm [51]. Growth of these particles
was controlled by using dual-beam illumination of nanoparticles. Citrate and poly(styrene
sulfonate) were used as stabilizing agents. Silver nanoparticles were also prepared by a very fast
reduction of Ag+ by -aminoalkyl radicals generated from hydrogen abstraction toward an
aliphatic amine by the excited triplet state of 2-substituted thioxanthone series
(TXOCH2COO and TXSCH2COO). This reaction leads to the conversion of silver
ions to metallic silver [52]. Silver nanoparticles were also synthesized by several irradiation
methods. Silver nanoparticles of well-defined shape and size distribution were prepared by laser
irradiation of an aqueous solution of silver salt and surfactant [53].
Nanoparticles were also prepared from benzophenone by using laser in a photo-
sensitization synthetic method. Low laser powers at short irradiation times produced silver
nanoparticles of approximately 20 nm, and an increased irradiation power produced
nanoparticles of approximately 5 nm. Silver nanoparticles were also synthesized by using laser
and mercury lamp as a light source [54]. The photo-sensitized growth of silver nanoparticles was
performed using thiophene (sensitizing dye) and silver nanoparticle formation by illumination of
Ag(NH3)+ in ethanol [55].
A simple one-step method called tollens method was used to synthesize silver
nanoparticles of controllable size. That green synthesis technique involved the reduction of
Ag(NH3)2+ (as a Tollens reagent) by an aldehyde [56]. In the modified Tollens procedure, silver
ions were reduced by saccharides in the presence of ammonia, which yields silver nanoparticle
films (50-200 nm), silver hydrosols (20-50 nm) and silver nanoparticles of different shapes. The
concentration of ammonia and nature of reducing agent plays important role in controlling size
and shape of silver nanoparticles.
Silver, gold, palladium, and platinum nanoparticles could be prepared at room
temperature, by simply mixing the corresponding metal ions with reduced polyoxometalates
which act as reducing and stabilizing agents. Polyoxometalates were soluble in water and had the
capability of undergoing stepwise, multielectron redox reactions without disturbing their
structure. It was reported that silver nanoparticles could be produced by illuminating a deaerated
solution of polyoxometalate/S/Ag+ (polyoxometalate: [PW12O40] 3, [SiW12O40] 4- ; S:propan-2-ol
or 2,4-dichlorophenol) [57]. Furthermore it was also reported the green chemistry-type one-step
synthesis and stabilization of silver nanostructures with MoVMoVI mixed-valence
polyoxometalates in water at room temperature [58].
Synthesis by biological methods
In recent years, silver nanoparticles of desired morphology and size prepared by green
chemistry method, becomes major focus for researchers in which natural reducing, stabilizing
and capping agents were used. Biological methods can be used to synthesize silver nanoparticles
without the use of any harsh, toxic and expensive chemical substances [59-62]. The mostly used
organisms in green synthesis of silver nanoparticles are discussed below.
Synthesis of silver nanoparticles using bacteria
Highly stable silver nanoparticles of 40 nm size could be synthesized by bioreduction of aqueous
silver ions with a culture supernatant of nonpathogenic bacterium, Bacillus licheniformis [63].
Moreover, bacterium Bacillus licheniformis were used to synthesize well dispersed silver
nanocrystal of size 50 nm [63]. Rapid biosynthesis of metallic nanoparticles of silver was
reported using the reduction of aqueous Ag+ ions by culture supernatants of Klebsiella
pneumonia, E. coli, and Enterobacter cloacae (Enterobacteriacae) [64]. The preparation process
was very fast and silver nanoparticles were synthesized within 5 minutes of silver ions coming in
contact with the cell filtrate. It seems that nitroreductase enzymes might be responsible for
bioreduction of silver ions.
Synthesis of silver nanoparticles using fungi
Silver nanoparticles could be synthesized extracellularly using Fusarium oxysporum, with no
evidence of flocculation of the particles even a month after the reaction [65]. Proteins stabilizing
silver nanoparticles might be responsible for the long-term stability of silver nanoparticles. The
morphology of nanoparticles observed in micrographs was generally spherical and occasionally
triangular shapes.
Stable silver nanoparticles were prepared by using Aspergillus flavus [66]. These
nanoparticles were stable in water for more than 3 months with no aggregation because of
surface binding of stabilizing materials secreted by the fungus [67]. Extracellular biosynthesis of
silver nanoparticles using Aspergillus fumigatus was also investigated. TEM results showed
well-dispersed silver nanoparticles (5-25 nm) with variable shapes. Most of them were spherical
in nature with some others having occasionally triangular shapes [68]. Extracellular filtrate of
Cladosporium cladosporioides biomass was used to synthesize silver nanoparticles [69]. It was
reported that proteins, organic acids and polysaccharides released by C. cladosporioides were
responsible for formation of spherical crystalline silver nanoparticles.
It was also reported that penicillium sp. J3 isolated from soil was able to produce silver
nanoparticles [70]. The bioreduction of silver ions occurred on the surface of the cells and
proteins might play a critical role in formation and stabilization of the synthesized nanoparticles.
Synthesis of silver nanoparticles using plants
Camellia sinensis (green tea) extract was used as a reducing and stabilizing agent for the
biosynthesis of silver nanoparticles in an aqueous solution in ambient conditions [71]. It was
reported that when the amount of C. sinensis extract was increased, the resulted nanoparticles
were slightly larger and more spherical. Phenolic acid type biomolecules (e.g., caffeine and
theophylline) present in the C. sinensis extract seemed to be responsible for the formation and
stabilization of silver nanoparticles. Black tea leaf extract was used for the synthesis of silver
nanoparticles. These nanoparticles were stable and had different shapes, such as spheres,
trapezoids, prisms, and rods. Polyphenols and flavonoids seemed to be responsible for the
biosynthesis of these nanoparticles [72].
High density of extremely stable silver nanoparticles (16-40 nm) were synthesized by
challenging silver ions with Datura metel (Solanaceae) leaf extract [73]. The leaf extracts of this
plant contains biomolecules, including alkaloids, proteins/enzymes, amino acids, alcoholic
compounds, and polysaccharides which could be used as reductant to react with silver ions, and
therefore used as scaffolds to direct the formation of silver nanoparticles in the solution. Stable
silver nanoparticles with average particle size ranging from 15 to 500 nm could be synthesized
extracellularly from Pinus desiflora, Diospyros kaki, Ginko biloba, Magnolia kobus and Platanus
orientalis leaf broths. It was noticed that M. kobus and D. kaki leaf broths, the synthesis rate and
final conversion to silver nanoparticles was faster, when the reaction temperature was increased.
But the average particle sizes produced by D. kaki leaf broth decreased from 50 nm to 16 nm,
when temperature was increased from 25 C to 95 C. It was also concluded that only 11 min
was required for more than 90% conversion at the reaction temperature of 95 C using M. kobus
leaf broth [74].
Silver ions could be reduced to silver nanoparticles of different shapes by using leaf
extracts from the aquatic medicinal plant, Nelumbo nucifera (Nymphaeaceae). These synthesized
nanoparticles showed larvicidal activities against malaria (Anopheles subpictus) and filariasis
(Culex quinquefasciatus) vectors [75]. Sorbus aucuparia leaf extract were used to biosynthesized
silver nanoparticles within 15 min. These nanoparticles were found stable for more than 3
months. The sorbate ion in the leaf extract of S. aucuparia seemed to be responsible for the
stability of silver nanoparticles [76].
Synthesis of polypyrrole-sillver nanocomposites
Silver and gold nanoparticles have been studied extensively due to their optical, electrochemical,
and electronic properties [7779]. During the synthesis of these nanoparticles, one should also
care about their agglomeration. To get rid of agglomeration surface coating is required. Many
stabilizing species have been studied including molecules with carboxylic acids, thiol groups,
inorganic materials, conventional polymers, and conducting polymers [8086]. To provide
stabilization against agglomeration, conducting polymers were used because they increase
electrical and electrochemical properties, improved conductivity, robustness, stability and
electrocatalytic activity [87, 88].
Among all metal-conducting polymer nanocomposites, polypyrrole (PPy)-silver nanoparticles
comes out to be very interesting material because it is environmental friendly and have high
conductivity and can easily be obtained [89-91]. PPy shows well characterized electrochromic
behavior due to the tunable nature of highest occupied molecular orbital and the lowest
unoccupied molecular orbital, which allows for the modulation of its optical and electrical
properties [88].
PPy-Agnanop nanocomposites could be synthesized by different chemical and electrochemical
procedures. PPy-Agnanop nanocomposites were synthesized by in situ chemical polymerization
through a redox reaction between pyrrole and silver nitrate [86]. PPy-Agnanop nanocomposites
were also synthesized at the interface of water and ionic liquid using one-step UV-induced
polymerization [92].
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