Author/Authors :
Sharafi, Zeinab Department of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology - School of Pharmacy - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Bakhshi, Bita Department of Medical Bacteriology - Faculty of Medical Sciences - Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran , Javidi, Jaber Department of Pharmaceutics and Nanotechnology - School of Pharmacy - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Adrangi, Sina Department of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology - School of Pharmacy - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
The Stober process is frequently used to prepare silica-coated iron oxide nanoparticles. This
is usually achieved by seeding a reaction mixture consisting of water, ethanol and a catalyst
with iron oxide particles and adding a silica precursor. The hydrolysis and condensation of
precursor monomers results in the deposition of a silica layer on iron oxide particles. However,
this process is accompanied by an increase in the ionic strength of the medium which promotes
the rapid aggregation of iron oxide particles. A number of methods have been developed to
prevent seed aggregation during the coating process. The majority of these methods include
a pretreatment step in which the surface of iron oxide particles is modified in a manner that
increases their stability in aqueous solutions. Here we suggest that by decreasing the initial
concentration of the catalyst for a short period to minimize nucleation by reducing precursor
hydrolysis rate and then gradually increasing the concentration to the optimum level to allow
silica formation to proceed normally it may be possible to prevent aggregation without surface
modification. The properties of the resulting nanoparticles as analyzed by transmission electron
microscopy and magnetometry as well as their efficiency at extracting genomic DNA from
different bacterial strains compared to that of a commercial extraction kit are also reported.
Keywords :
Aggregation , Sol-gel , Silica , Magnetite , Nanoparticle