6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1272031
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Degradation of silica particles functionalised with essential oil components under simulated physiological conditions
María Ruiz-ricoCristina FuentesAna FuentesMaría José RuizJosé M. Baratsubject
SiliconEnvironmental EngineeringSiliconTECNOLOGIA DE ALIMENTOSHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesis0211 other engineering and technologieschemistry.chemical_elementNanoparticle02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesMCM-4101 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundMCM-41Zeta potentialOils VolatileEnvironmental ChemistryHumansSolubilityParticle SizeWaste Management and DisposalDissolution0105 earth and related environmental sciences021110 strategic defence & security studiesVanillinArtificial lysosomal fluidIn vitro digestionSilicaSilicon DioxidePollutionFunctionalisationchemistryChemical engineeringSolubilityParticle-size distributionNanoparticlesdescription
[EN] In this work, the biodurability of three silica particle types (synthetic amourphous silica, MCM-41 microparticles, MCM-41 nanoparticles) functionalised with three different essential oil components (carvacrol, eugenol, vanillin) was studied under conditions that represented the human gastrointestinal tract and lysosomal fluid. The effect of particle type, surface immobilised component and mass quantity on the physico-chemical properties of particles and silicon dissolution was determined. Exposure to biological fluids did not bring about changes in the zeta potential values or particle size distribution of the bare or functionalised materials, but the in vitro digestion process partially degraded the structure of the MCM-41 nanoparticles. Functionalisation preserved the structure of the MCM-41 nanoparticles after simulating an in vitro digestion process, and significantly decreased the amount of silicon dissolved after exposing different particles to both physiological conditions, independently of the essential oil component anchored to their surface. The MCM-41 microparticles showed the highest solubility, while synthetic amorphous silica presented the lowest levels of dissolved silicon. The study of these modified silica particles under physiological conditions could help to predict the toxicological behaviour of these new materials.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-04-27 |