Creating anti-viral high-touch surfaces using photocatalytic transparent films.

Chemosphere

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA. Electronic address:

Published: May 2023

Antimicrobial and self-cleaning surface coatings are promising tools to combat the growing global threat of infectious diseases and related healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). Although many engineered TiO-based coating technologies are reporting antibacterial performance, the antiviral performance of these coatings has not been explored. Furthermore, previous studies have underscored the importance of the "transparency" of the coating for surfaces such as the touch screens of medical devices. Hence, in this study, we fabricated a variety of nanoscale TiO-based transparent thin films (anatase TiO, anatase/rutile mixed phase TiO, silver-anatase TiO composite, and carbon nanotube-anatase TiO composite) via dipping and airbrush spray coating technologies and evaluated their antiviral performance (Bacteriophage MS2 as the model) under dark and illuminated conditions. The thin films showed high surface coverage (ranging from 40 to 85%), low surface roughness (maximum average roughness 70 nm), super-hydrophilicity (water contact angle 6-38.4°), and high transparency (70-80% transmittance under visible light). Antiviral performance of the coatings revealed that silver-anatase TiO composite (nAg/nTiO) coated samples achieved the highest antiviral efficacy (5-6 log reduction) while the other TiO coated samples showed fair antiviral results (1.5-3.5 log reduction) after 90 min LED irradiation at 365 nm. Those findings indicate that TiO-based composite coatings are effective in creating antiviral high-touch surfaces with the potential to control infectious diseases and HAIs.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.138280DOI Listing

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