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Review Article

Bacteria and nanosilver: the quest for optimal production

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Pages 272-287 | Received 02 Aug 2018, Accepted 24 Oct 2018, Published online: 02 Jan 2019
 

Abstract

Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) have potential uses in many applications, but current chemical production methods are challenged by scalability, limited particle stability, and the use of hazardous chemicals. The biological processes present in bacteria to mitigate metallic contaminants in their environment present a potential solution to these challenges. Before commercial exploitation of this technology can be achieved, the quality of bacteriogenic AgNPs needs to be improved for certain applications. While the colloidal and morphological stabilities of biogenic AgNPs are widely regarded as superior to chemogenic particles, little control over the synthesis of particle morphologies has been achieved in biological systems. This article reviews a range of biosynthetic reaction conditions and how they affect AgNP formation in bacteria to understand which are most influential. While there remains uncertainty, some general trends are emerging: higher Ag+ concentrations result in higher AgNP production, up to a point at which the toxic effects begin to dominate; the optimal temperature appears to be heavily species-dependent and linked to the optimal growth temperature of the organism. However, hotter conditions generally favor higher production rates, while colder environments typically give greater shape diversity. Little attention has been paid to other potentially important growth conditions including halide concentrations, oxygen exposure, and irradiation with light. To fully exploit biosynthetic production routes as alternatives to chemical methods, hurdles remain with controlling particle morphologies and require further work to elucidate and harness them. By better understanding the factors influencing AgNP production, a foundation can be laid from which shape-controlled production can be achieved.

Acknowledgements

We are also thankful for faculty support for DAC from the Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Funding

We are grateful to Defense Science and Technology Laboratory for funding TM (PhD Studentship).

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