Ambient Light-Activated Antibacterial Material: Manganese Vanadium Oxide (Mn2V2O7)

Antimicrobial surfaces can reduce the spread of bacteria from high-touch surfaces, saving millions of lives worldwide. Antibacterial photocatalytic films, like TiO2, are widely reported but limited in practice because they need high-intensity UV light. More practical but less reported are photocatal...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied bio materials 2021-09, Vol.4 (9), p.6903-6911
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Jagriti, Hegde, Prajwal B, Ravindra, Pramod, Sen, Prosenjit, Avasthi, Sushobhan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antimicrobial surfaces can reduce the spread of bacteria from high-touch surfaces, saving millions of lives worldwide. Antibacterial photocatalytic films, like TiO2, are widely reported but limited in practice because they need high-intensity UV light. More practical but less reported are photocatalysts that work under low-intensity visible light from an indoor lamp. Here, we demonstrate that manganese vanadium oxide (MVO) is an antibacterial photocatalyst that works under light-emitting diode (LED) lights at ∼3000 lux. MVO is an earth-abundant semiconductor with a band gap of 1.7 eV that absorbs visible light to create reactive oxygen species (ROS) in water. ROS reduces bacteria counts by 4 orders of magnitude in 8 h under 9000 lux LED light. The antibacterial effect is significant even in MVO powder and films, which are amenable to large-area fabrication. MVO is a promising candidate for next-generation antimicrobial coatings that are stable, cheap, effective, earth-abundant, and activated by indoor lights.
ISSN:2576-6422
2576-6422
DOI:10.1021/acsabm.1c00605