Abstract
This study reports the antimicrobial activity and improved dyeing performance of cotton knitted fabric by depositing silver nanoparticles on the surface. The cotton fabric is first treated with caustic soda (NaOH) of three different concentrations to activate the hydroxyl groups on the cellulose surface and then the nanoparticles are introduced on fabric surface by direct reduction of silver nitrate salt using ascorbic acid. The presence of silver nanoparticles on the fabric surface is clearly observed by scanning electron micrograph. The elementary analysis is done by energy dispersive spectroscopy and the chemical interaction of cotton fibre with nano silver is characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectrum. In this work, the antimicrobial activity on Ag deposited sample is investigated by quantitative analysis against both Gram positive (S. aureus) and Gram negative (E. coli) bacteria. Results shows a significant antimicrobial activity such as more than 90% bacterial reduction of both Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria are inhibited. The fabric sample is dyed with 2% direct dye and consequently the result shows very good performance in dye exhaustion, colour strength and fastness property. For instance, the incorporation of Ag nanoparticles increases 7% of dyestuff exhaustion and 15% of colour strength of the fabric. However, Ag nanoparticles deposited fabric loses its strength slightly due to the pretreatment using NaOH for the functionalization of cotton.
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1 Introduction
Textile industries are important to consumer for clothing, households goods, furnishing and other textiles product. Now a days textile cloth with various functional properties is very popular. Antimicrobial textile is one of them because of the health concern of the consumer. It has become important due to an opportunity for production of protective, decorative and safe textile products. This also creates a new possibility for textile goods to be used in pharmaceutical, medical, engineering, agricultural, and food industries [1]. Antimicrobial textile is mainly obtained by finishing process of textile goods on various ways [2,3,4,5,6].
However cotton fabric provides an excellent environment for microorganism to grow [7]. That means it is susceptible to bacterial attack as they provide large surface area to absorb moisture required for bacterial growth. This often leads objectionable odor, dermal infection, product deterioration allergic responses and other related issues. It is therefore important to impart antimicrobial activity on cotton so as to protect the health of the wearer [8]. Some examples are inorganic salt, organometallic iodophors, phenols and triphenols, ammonium salts, antibiotics, nitro compounds, urea and related compounds, formaldehyde derivatives, amines etc. Most of those chemical are toxic or non biodegradable, so it is highly concerning to the environment [9]. For this reason textile industry always search for safe chemical and eco friendly process for imparting antimicrobial property. Moreover an effective antimicrobial finish should be able to kill or stop the growth of microorganisms. It has to be durable to wash or dry cleaning, compatible with other ingredients in the finishing formulation, has minimal impacts on both the environment and the product quality, and has easy to apply for low cost and low toxicity criteria [10].
The antimicrobial activity of silver is very well known and widely used as a substitute of harmful antimicrobial agent. Silver has been used in many applications in free metal or compound forms because it possesses antimicrobial activity against pathogens but is nontoxic to human body. The silver ions are very reactive leading to inhibition of microbial respiration and metabolism as well as physical damage [9]. Silver nanoparticles due to their strong and wide spectrum of antimicrobial activities have gained major focus among all nanoparticles. As bactericides, the silver nanoparticles may help in solving the serious antibiotic resistance problem [11]. It can inhibit the growth of a wide variety of micro-organisms including fungi, viruses, and bacteria. Nano Ag is very reactive with proteins, and when it comes into contact with the bacteria or fungi it inhibits cell growth. The antimicrobial activity of silver nanoparticle is related to its shape and particle size. The smaller size particle gives better performance of antimicrobial activity [12,13,14,15].
At present time nano Ag have been synthesized by physical milling, chemical reduction, plant leaf extraction, and solgel process [16, 17]. Some researchers also follow the in situ route for direct synthesis of silver nanoparticle on the treated material surface [18,19,20,21,22,23]. The main problem of synthesis and application of nanoparticles are an aggregation process, causing the loss of their unique properties [24]. So in situ process is better for nanoparticle growth directly on fabric surface, there is very little chance of aggregation, where cotton fiber itself can act as a template to stabilize and control the growth of silver nanoparticles. Furthermore it offers long lasting effect and excellent wash durability of nano silver [21]. In this research very small size around 14.1 nm nano Ag is formed by in situ method and the distribution is uniform. Here caustic soda treated cotton fabric acts as a good media for the growth of Ag nanoparticles. Along with this the silver nanoparticle is regarded as a mordant for dyestuff, as a result it increases the dye affinity and consequently dye exhaustion.
2 Experiments
2.1 Specification of fabric
For the work 100% cotton knitted fabric of following construction and specification are used mentioned in Table 1.
2.2 Chemicals
Silver nitrate (AgNO3, 99.9% pure), sodium hydroxide pallets (NaOH, 99.8% pure), ascorbic acid (C6H8O6, extra pure), acetic acid (CH3COOH) are purchased from Merck, Germany. For dying C.I. Direct red 9, leveling agent and glauber salt (Na2SO4·10H2O) are collected from Meghmani Dyes and intermediates Ltd, India. All experiments are performed at room temperature.
2.3 Methods
2.3.1 Synthesis of silver nanoparticles
Scoured and bleached cotton fabric is impregnated on different concentration of caustic soda solution (1M, 2M, 3M) with 1:30 mL ratio and kept 5 min, then alkali pretreated cotton fabric is kept on AgNO3 solution of 1M concentration at room temperature. One sample is immersed in same concentration of silver nitrate solution without treating with caustic soda. This is denoted by Sk-1 (Silver knit-1). Then fabric is penetrated on 0.01M ascorbic acid and stay at 30 min. Here ascorbic acid has the ability to precipitate the metallic silver in acid solution. The treated samples are denoted as Sk-1 for without caustic treated, Sk-2 for 1M caustic treated, Sk-3 for 2M and Sk-4 for 3M caustic treated. The reaction happened during nanoparticle formation is shown in Eq. 1. The digital image of treated and untreated fabric is exposed in Fig. 1 and the colour difference is shown in Table 2.
2.3.2 Dyeing
Cotton fabric with silver nanoparticle is dyed by 2% direct dye in exhaust method at 60 °C temperature on 55 min in a sample dyeing machine at 1:10 liquor ratio. It is then rinsed and washed properly with distilled water.
3 Analysis and measurements
3.1 Scanning electron microscopy (SEM)
SEM is a type of electron microscope that produces images of a sample by scanning the surface with a focused beam of electrons. Here field emission electron microscopy (JSM-600, Tokyo, Japan) is used for this purpose. The fabric of nano Ag is well washed with distilled water before SEM test. The SEM image shows the morphology, size and distribution of silver nanoparticles on knitted fabric surface.
3.2 Determination of silver content
Silver content of cotton fabric with in situ deposited nano silver is measured by atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS spectra 220), where 0.2 g of every silver decorated sample is immersed in 30 mL of 15 wt% of Nitric acid in separate pot. It is kept for 2 h at 80 °C temperature then silver concentration is measured by flame atomic absorption spectroscopy [24]. The Eq. 2 is used to determine silver content as
where Cs denote the silver concentration in extracted solution, V is the volume of extracted solution in Liter (L) and Wd is weight of dried cotton fabric and Mc is the moisture content.
3.3 X-ray diffraction (XRD)
XRD Pattern of silver nanoparticles deposited cotton fabric is measured by X-Ray Defractometer (Phillips, Expert pro, Holland). This image can identify the crystal structure, shape and size of synthesized particles.
3.4 Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR)
FTIR is used to check the chemical changes and bonding interaction of cotton fabric with nano silver. Both of the untreated and treated cotton fabrics are characterized by FT-IR/NIR spectrophotometer (Model: Frontier, Perkin Elmer, USA). Scanning area is in the range of 4000–700 cm−1.
3.5 Antimicrobial activity
The antimicrobial property of the untreated and silver treated fabrics is evaluated by ASTM E2149-01. Antimicrobial activity is examined against Staphylococcus aureus (gram positive) and Escherichia coli (gram negative) bacteria. It is expressed in terms of reduction % of the organism contact with the test specimen compared to the number of bacterial cells surviving after contact with the untreated sample as calculated by Eq. 3.
where A is the surviving cells (CFU/mL) for the flasks containing test samples (nano Ag deposited cotton) and B is that for the untreated sample (blank cotton) after 1 h contact time.
3.6 Dyeing performances
3.6.1 Exhaustion (%)
The process of transfer of dyestuff from the dye bath on to the fiber or material is known as exhaustion. The ratio between the amount of dye taken up by the substrate and the amount of dye originally available is called exhaustion. The formula for calculation of exhaustion is shown by Eq. 4, where Co = initial concentration of dye in dye bath and Cs = concentration during the process
3.6.2 Colour strength
Colour strength of silver nano deposited cotton fabric is measured by spectrophotometer (Data colour). The machine is characterized as follows: CIE LAB colour space, 10 degree observer with D65 illuminate d/2 viewing geometry and measurement area of 2 mm. Colour measurement parameters are lightness (L*) from black (0) to white(100), (a*) is a red (+)/green (−) ratio, (b*) is yellow (+)/blue (−) ratio. Each data point is the average of two independent measurements. The colour strength of fabric is calculated by Kubelka–Munk theory [25] using the Eq. 5.
where R is the reflectance, K is absorbance coefficient and S is the scattering coefficient.
3.6.3 Color fastness
It is the resistance of colour of textiles to fade or bleed against different agencies such as light, wash, water, perspiration, rubbing, acid, alkali, hot pressing, bleaching etc. Colour fastness to wash, rubbing and light is measured by test method called ISO105CO4, ISO105X12 and ISO105B02, respectably.
3.7 Mechanical properties (bursting strength)
Bursting strength is a method of measuring fabric strength where the material is stressed in all directions at the same time. It is an alternative method to measure tensile strength but main way to evaluate the strength of knitted fabric. In this research bursting strength is measured by Truburst machine of James Heal, following the method of ISO 13938-2:1999.
3.8 Wash durability
The silver nanoparticles deposited fabric samples are subjected to 5, 10 and 15 home laundering cycle by using the method: AATCC 61-2009.
4 Results and discussion
4.1 SEM: surface morphology
The morphological change of cotton fabric caused by in situ deposition of silver nanoparticles is examined by scanning electron microscopy. The SEM image is shown in the Fig. 2a–e, which represents the clear deposition of silver nanoparticles on treated fabric. It is similar to the image of Rafie et al. [26] where the silver nanoparticles are bio synthesized. It is also observed from Fig. 2 that due to high concentration of alkali the amount of nanoparticle deposition increases. That means the more concentration of NaOH, the more deposition of silver nanoparticles [(d) and (e)]. Caustic concentration of 3M as given in Fig. 2e shows lot of agglomerated particles. The SEM images demonstrate the much deposition of silver nanoparticles on fabric surface due to the formation of Cell-O−Na+ through alkali which acts as an effective host for the silver ion and the size of particles are reduce to nano level by acid reduction.
4.2 Energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS)
It is recorded to determine the elemental composition of chemical of treated and untreated samples.
It confirms the presence of silver nanoparticles on treated fabric. The graphical presentation of EDS analysis of nano deposited sample, Sk-4 is shown in Fig. 2f. The figure clearly shows that the silver deposited sample give the peaks on 3 keV which attributes to the signal of silver formation. The mass percentage of silver nano particles is also obtained from EDS, which confirms more concentration of NaOH causes more amount of nano Ag growth. The obtained mass percentage is shown in Table 3.
4.3 XRD analysis
Crystalline size and structure of the silver nanoparticles are measured by XRD (X-Ray Diffraction Spectroscopy). Figure 3a–d shows the XRD image of all four treated sample. The characteristics picks of the image clearly indicate the presence of silver nanoparticles on every treated fabric sample (Sk-1 to Sk-4). Similar picks of silver nanoparticles are obtained on synthesized of silver nanoparticle from leaf extract by Mahendran et al. [28] and Singh and Khanna on their in-situ synthesized nano Ag [27]. In Fig. 3 the distinct picks of 2θ exhibits at 38.22°, 44.5°, 64.82°, 78° are assigned to corresponding reflection through the planes of (1 1 1), (2 0 0), (2 2 0), and (3 1 1) respectively, indicates the silver nanoparticles are fcc (Face centered cubic) and crystalline in nature. The peaks are almost same for all treated sample pointed by circle on figure. The other peaks are corresponding peaks of cellulosic structure. Only for Sk-1, the peak at 65° and 78° is absent. The mean size of silver nano particles is calculated using the Debye–Scherrer’s equation [29] as Particle Size = (0.9 × λ)/(d cosθ), where θ = 2θ/2, d = the full width at half maximum intensity of the peak, λ is the wavelength of X-ray source (1.54056 A°). From this equation it is found that the calculated average size of silver nano particle is around 14.1 nm.
4.4 Silver content
The results on Table 4 clearly indicate the deposition of silver on treated fabric. The sample Sk-1 shows lowest amount of silver content than others, whereas, sample Sk-4 gives highest amount of silver content. Table 4 indicates an increasing rate of silver deposition from Sk-2 to Sk-4 that means the more of caustic concentration, the more of nano silver content. So the result proves that the content of nano silver deposition depends on alkali concentration.
4.5 FTIR spectroscopy
The fourier transform spectrum of treated and untreated samples are represented in Fig. 4. The trends of three different curves in the figure are quite similar. It generally shows the characteristic peaks for the main functional groups of cellulosic structure of cotton fabrics. It can be pointed out that the cellulosic structure includes the peaks in 3340–3353 cm−1, 2913–2997 cm−1, 1441–1467 cm−1 and 1033–1114 cm−1, which attributes to 3347 cm−1 (O–H, stretching), 2919 cm−1(C–H, stretching), 1163 cm−1 (C–O, stretching) and 1034 cm−1 (C–O–C) according to IR table. It is clearly observed that there is no significant change occurred on cotton due to caustic (NaOH) as well as silver treatment, which is similar to the work of Li Shuhui et al. [30]. Therefore, it is stated that treatment of cotton fabric with nano silver does not affect on the molecular structure of fabrics [31], and this assures that there is no chemical interaction between cellulosic chains and silver nanoparticle. Only the sample Sk-4 (3M caustic soda) in Fig. 4 shows that the intensity of some peaks is reduces very slightly. It indicates that NaOH treatment decreases the intensity of hydroxyl group (–OH) [32]. So the contact between fibers and metallic silver nanoparticles happens only by the physical adsorption of silver nanoparticles on fabric surface.
4.6 Antimicrobial effect
The antimicrobial activity of treated and untreated cotton fabrics are presented on Table 5. Treated sample shows excellent bacterial reduction against both bacteria of gram positive and gram negative. It is also observed that there is a relation between the amount of nanoparticle and the % of bacterial reduction. Result indicates, presence of more silver nanoparticle causes higher antimicrobial activity because 3M caustic treated sample shows highest bacterial reduction (R%) whereas, the sample without caustic shows comparatively lower R% (Table 5). The image of antimicrobial rate is presented on Fig. 5 that proof the bacterial reduction is higher on treated fabric for both two bacteria. All results of antimicrobial test evident that the Ag nano deposited fabric is more effective on gram positive bacteria than gram negative. The treated sample is capable of reducing bacteria up to 95% for sample Sk-4, even after 15 home laundering. Washing durability is also good as the sample retains 46% bacterial reduction after washing. Additionally, in a recent work, Azam et al. investigated the cytotoxicity effects of a cellulose paper sample decorated with Ag nanoparticles. The investigation confirmed that this kind of Ag modified surfaces is not toxic to plant and animal tissues [33].
4.7 Bursting strength
The result of bursting strength test is plotted in the Fig. 6. From the figure it is observed that the treated sample shows lower bursting strength than untreated fabric. The sample Sk-4 with 3M caustic soda is showing lowest strength which is 230.73 kPa whereas, untreated sample gives 286.92 kPa. However the loss of bursting strength is not linear with the concentration of caustic soda. For sample, Sk-4 loses approximately 13% strength, whereas sample Sk-2 having 1M caustic soda loses only 3%. The reason is that more amount of caustic soda causes higher celluloseate formation which is responsible for strength fall.
4.8 Colour performance
The nano treated and dyed cotton fabric shows better result in dye exhaustion (%), colour strength, and fastness property. The colour strength is higher in all four treated fabric, where sample Sk-4 shows best depth of colour compared with untreated fabric. The obtained results are arranged in Table 6. It is well defined that silver is a metal which have inheriting antimicrobial property and it acts as a mordent to grab more dyestuff on fabric. As a result better colour performance is obtained on direct dyed cotton fabric due to nano Ag deposition. Moreover the metal nano silver increases the dye affinity of cotton fabric. The fastness properties are also increases by nano Ag deposition.
5 Conclusions
An easy and improved technique is used to synthesis silver nanoparticles on fabric surface to develop finished fabric with high antimicrobial activity. The SEM and EDS report proves well deposition of nano Ag on fabric. The size of the particle is obtained by XRD pattern analysis as 14.1 nm. The content of silver nanoparticles increases with the increase of caustic soda concentration. However, the increment of nano particle deposition is not linear with the increase of caustic soda concentration. FTIR spectrum shows that there is no bonding phenomenon occurred on cotton fabric due to nano Ag formation. The bacterial reduction is found excellent and is 95% for S. aureus and 92% for E. coli. The action of treated sample against gram positive bacteria is quite higher than that of gram negative bacteria. The study reflects that antimicrobial activity depends on the amount of the deposition of Ag nanoparticles. Further important, the nano deposited fabric shows enhancement of colour strength, exhaustion and fastness property of direct dyed cotton, which causes quantitative reduction of dyestuff for dyeing and hence the dye house effluent resulting in reduction of environmental pollution.
6 Abbreviations
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1.
SEM—Scanning Electron Microscopy
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2.
EDS—Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy
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3.
XRD—X-Ray Dispersive Spectroscopy
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4.
FTIR—Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy
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5.
R%—Reduction percentage of bacteria
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6.
WI—Whiteness Index
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7.
K/S—Color Strength
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8.
Color measurement parameters are lightness (L*) from black (0) to white(100), a*is a red (+)/green (−) ratio, b*is yellow (+)/blue
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge the amenity provided by Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET) for silver nano particle synthesis and characterization such as SEM, EDS and XRD. We also like to acknowledge Prof. Dr. Suvamoy Datta for the facility of antimicrobial test on the department of microbiology of University of Primeasia. The FTIR analysis is supported by Fibre and Polymer division of BCSIR (Bangladesh Council of Scientific and Industrial Research). Some physical test opportunity is given by Bangladesh University of Textiles (BUTEX).
Funding
There is no funding of this work. It is a part of Ph.D. research of Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET). All cost of experiment will be provided by university after completion of the degree.
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Author IST defined the research plane under the supervision of Prof. Dr. MA. Dr SA gives some ideas about AAS (atomic absorption spectroscopy) test and guided about in situ synthesis process.
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Tania, I.S., Ali, M. & Azam, M.S. In-situ synthesis and characterization of silver nanoparticle decorated cotton knitted fabric for antibacterial activity and improved dyeing performance. SN Appl. Sci. 1, 64 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s42452-018-0068-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s42452-018-0068-x