Ultrafast physical bacterial inactivation and photocatalytic self-cleaning of ZnO nanoarrays for rapid and sustainable bactericidal applications
Autor
Xie, Yuan
Qu, Xi
Li, Jinyang
Li, Da
Wei, Wei
Hui, David
Zhang, Qiao
Meng, Fanbin
Yin, Hong
Xu, Xiaoling
Wang, Yong
Wang, Li
Zhou, Zuowan
Institución
Resumen
Various nanostructured surfaces have been developed recently to physically inactivate bacteria, for reducing the
rapidly spreading threat of pathogenic bacteria. However, it generally takes several hours for these surfaces to inactivate most of the bacteria, which greatly limits their application in the fields favoring rapid bactericidal performance. Besides, the accumulated bacteria debris left on these surfaces is rarely discussed in the previous reports.
Herein we report the nanotip-engineered ZnO nanoarrays (NAs) with ultrafast physical bactericidal rate and the
ability to photocatalytically remove the bacteria debris. Neither chemical (Zn2+ or reactive oxygen species) nor
photocatalytic effect leads to the ultrafast bactericidal rate, where 97.5% of E. coli and 94.9% of S. aureus are
inactivated within only 1 min. The simulation analysis further supported our proposed mechanism attributing
the ultrafast bactericidal activity to the great stress enabled by the uneven topography. Moreover, the reexposure of the ZnO NAs nanotips can be achieved in only 10 min under a mild UV light source. This study not
only presents an ultrafast physical bactericidal activity, but also demonstrates the potential of the recyclable
and photocatalytic self-cleaning functions of theses surfaces for applications that desire rapid and sustainable
bactericidal performance.