Spontaneous Transformation of Biomedical Polymeric Silver Salt into a Nanocomposite: Physical-Chemical and Antimicrobial Properties Dramatically Depend on the Initial Preparation State.
Klavdia A AbzaevaBoris G SukhovSpartak S KhutsishviliElena B TarabukinaLev E ZelenkovAnna V NevezhinaTat'yana V FadeevaPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
An antimicrobial polyacrylic silver salt (freshly prepared, stored for one year and model-aged) was studied by physical-chemical techniques for nanoparticle detection. In all cases, this salt represents a composite of radical-enriched macromolecules and silver(0) nanoparticles. As time passed, the initial small spherical nanoparticles were converted into larger non-spherical silver nanoparticles. The initial highly water-soluble antimicrobial solid nanocomposite almost loses its solubility in water and cannot be used as an antimicrobial agent. Unlike insoluble solid silver polyacrylate, its freshly prepared aqueous solution retains a liquid-phase consistency after one year as well as pronounced antimicrobial properties. The mechanism of these spontaneous and model-simulated processes was proposed. These results have attracted attention for officinal biomedicinal silver salts as complex radical-enriched nanocomposite substances; they also indicate contrasting effects of silver polymeric salt storing in solid and solution forms that dramatically influence antimicrobial activity.