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Reducing end thiol-modified nanocellulose: Bottom-up enzymatic synthesis and use for templated assembly of silver nanoparticles into biocidal composite material

Chao Zhong, Krisztina Zajki-Zechmeister, Bernd Nidetzky

2021Carbohydrate Polymers32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nanoparticle-polymer composites are important functional materials but structural control of their assembly is challenging. Owing to its crystalline internal structure and tunable nanoscale morphology, cellulose is promising polymer scaffold for templating such composite materials. Here, we show bottom-up synthesis of reducing end thiol-modified cellulose chains by iterative bi-enzymatic β-1,4-glycosylation of 1-thio-β-d-glucose (10 mM), to a degree of polymerization of ∼8 and in a yield of ∼41% on the donor substrate (α-d-glucose 1-phosphate, 100 mM). Synthetic cellulose oligomers self-assemble into highly ordered crystalline (cellulose allomorph II) material showing long (micrometers) and thin nanosheet-like morphologies, with thickness of 5-7 nm. Silver nanoparticles were attached selectively and well dispersed on the surface of the thiol-modified cellulose, in excellent yield (≥ 95%) and high loading efficiency (∼2.2 g silver/g thiol-cellulose). Examined against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, surface-patterned nanoparticles show excellent biocidal activity. Bottom-up approach by chemical design to a functional cellulose nanocomposite is presented. Synthetic thiol-containing nanocellulose can expand the scope of top-down produced cellulose materials.

Topics & Concepts

NanocelluloseCelluloseMaterials scienceNanoparticlePolymerChemical engineeringSilver nanoparticleSurface modificationNanocompositeThiolComposite numberYield (engineering)Polymer chemistryNanotechnologyChemistryOrganic chemistryComposite materialEngineeringAdvanced Cellulose Research Studiesbiodegradable polymer synthesis and propertiesElectrohydrodynamics and Fluid Dynamics