AI Article Synopsis

  • Rapid industrial growth leads to increased production of harmful waste, prompting the need for biodegradable plastics and advanced materials.
  • Polysaccharide composites are highlighted for their excellent film-forming abilities, safety, and biodegradability, though they still need improvement in performance.
  • The study introduces carbon quantum dots into starch/chitosan biocomposites, enhancing mechanical properties and optical characteristics, while showing no cytotoxicity, though some nanocomposites exhibit increased genotoxicity compared to controls.

Article Abstract

Rapid industrial growth is associated with an increase in the production of environmentally harmful waste. A potential solution to significantly reduce pollution is to replace current synthetic materials with readily biodegradable plastics. Moreover, to meet the demands of technological advancements, it is essential to develop materials with unprecedented properties to enhance their functionality. Polysaccharide composites demonstrate significant potential in this regard. Polysaccharides possess exceptional film-forming abilities and are safe for human use, biodegradable, widely available, and easily modifiable. Unfortunately, polysaccharide-based films fall short of meeting all expectations. To address this issue, the current study focused on incorporating carbon quantum dots (CQDs), which are approximately 10 nm in size, into the structure of a starch/chitosan biocomposite at varying concentrations. This modification has improved the mechanical properties of the resulting nanocomposites. The inclusion of nanoparticles led to a slight reduction in solubility and an increase in the swelling degree. The optical characteristics of the obtained films were influenced by the presence of CQDs, and the fluorescence intensity of the nanocomposites changed due to the specific heavy metal ions and amino acids used. Consequently, these nanocomposites show great potential for detecting these compounds. Cellular viability assessments and comet assays confirm that the resulting nanocomposites do not exhibit any cytotoxic properties based on this specific analytic method. The tested nanocomposites with the addition of carbon quantum dots (NC/CD II and NC/CD III) were characterised by greater genotoxicity compared to the negative control. The positive control, the starch/chitosan composite alone, was also characterised by a greater induction of chromatin damage in mouse cells compared to a pure mouse blood sample.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11205529PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma17122967DOI Listing

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