The fight against the COVID pandemic has got a new weapon in its arsenal with scientists developing a compound that promises to help make PPEs microbial resistant.
Lignin, which is a natural and a nontoxic biopolymer, is an emerging material for developing coatings, films, gels, adhesives, and adsorbents. It also acts as a capping, stabilizing, and reducing agent for fabricating nanomaterials. In the new study, a team of researchers at the Department of Biotechnology’s Centre of Innovative and Applied Bioprocessing (DBT-CIAB), at Mohali have developed a lignin-based coating material, which when applied to a cotton cloth, was found to have antimicrobial properties.
The fight against the COVID pandemic has got a new weapon in its arsenal with scientists developing a compound that promises to help make PPEs microbial resistant.
The scientists started by developing a titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanocomposite by using lignin as the matrix. The product exhibited better antioxidant and antimicrobial properties when compared with lignin alone or commercially available Titanium dioxide nanocomposites by themselves. Subsequently, they prepared a lignin-based coating material. The compound was doped with the newly developed lignin- TiO2 nanocomposites and with the commercial TiO2 nanoparticles.
Comparative studies were performed among all the lignin coatings, both doped and undoped. The analysis showed that the lignin coating consisting of 5% w/w lignin based TiO2 nanocomposites exhibited promising antimicrobial potential.
A report on the findings has been published in ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering, which is a journal of the American Chemical Society. The study team consisted of Jayeeta Bhaumik, Ravneet Kaur, Neeraj S. Thakur, and Sanjam Chandna.
You may also like
-
New Heat-Based Approach To Cancer Treatment Can Reduce Chemotherapy Doses
-
Scientists Take A Major Step Towards Unification Of Classical & Quantum Gravity
-
India Graphene Engineering and Innovation Centre (IGEIC) Under the Vision of Viksit Bharat@2047 Launched
-
New High-Performance Gas Sensor can Monitor Low Level Nitrogen Oxides Pollution
-
Antidepressant Drug can be Repurposed for Treating Breast Cancer