So you want to segregate your nanoparticles?

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2012-10-23

Silver nanoparticles are useful as additives for polymeric materials in view of their antimicrobial properties. On the other hand, homogeneous distribution of the nanoparticles in the polymer matrix produces a lower effective concentration at the surface, where they matter most because that is where the material comes into contact with pathogens and microbes.

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One way to improve this situation could be producing a material that is not homogeneous, for example with a surface layer that has nanoparticles and the bulk of the material which instead does not, or to a lesser degree. However, producing layered materials is in general complicated and expensive.

To address this issue in a simpler and more scalable fashion, Orlicky and co-workers at Army Research Lab, in a paper published of Applied , have used hyperbranched functionalized polymer additives that automatically migrate to the surface of a polyurethane matrix, bringing with them the silver nanoparticles, which are tied to the hyperbranched polymers by ligand exchange, and thus follow them to the surface.

This generates a seven-fold increase of the concentration of silver nanoparticles at the surface, and the composites retain their antimicrobial properties.

Source: Nanotechnology Now